February 1999

Date: Sun, 31 Jan 1999 22:05:34 -0800

From: “R & L Carroll” <Robert.J.Carroll@GTE.net

Hello! Rebecca to answer your question about your GFG quilt top, I always

try to find period fabrics for repairs or finishing tops. Replacement

fabrics should not be difficult to find. Finding a piece large enough for

the backing may be more difficult. So many quiltmakers in the past used

plain white or off white for their quilt backs that you would be safe with

these. But I would use a reproduction if I wanted to add a little color to

the back. But then again I’m not a purist. I would use cotton for the

batting so it would have the old look. Have fun finishing your top.

Laurette from So. California


Date: Mon, 1 Feb 1999 07:54:05 EST

From: Baglady111@aol.com

To: ttsw@ttsw.com, QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: QUILT SHOW

Message-ID: ae4d95fb.36b5a3ed@aol.com

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PIONEER FLORIDA MUSEUM ASSOC.

9TH Annaul Quilt & Antique Show & Sale

located on Pioneer Museum Rd

Dade City, Florida

Sat & Sun Feb 6 & 7, 1999

Special event this year is an exhibit of Feedsack quilts an memoribilia

JANE CLARK STAPEL of THE FEEDSACK CLUB, will be the guest speaker on Sat and

Sun.

For added info call Donna Swart at 352-567-0262


Date: Mon, 1 Feb 1999 08:44:27 EST

From: Baglady111@aol.com

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: lost address

Message-ID: 5f7bd095.36b5afbb@aol.com

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I am in need of an email address for ELIZABETH JOHNSON from CHALFONT, pa

please email me at baglady111@aol.com

Many thanx that there is a place where one can get the help when needed..Jane

of THE FEEDSACK CLUB


Date: Mon, 1 Feb 1999 09:42:38 EST

From: EllynLK@aol.com

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: Re: Thread and Fabric Questions

Message-ID: 6353533c.36b5bd5e@aol.com

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In a message dated 1/31/99 6:53:29 PM Pacific Standard Time, Rebecca writes:

<< Also, I have a Grandmother;s Flower Garden that will need replacing of at

least one ‘flower’ — should I use repro fabric or should I try to date quilt

top and look for some vintage fabric that will work — or does it matter??

Guess this same question goes for the fabric that I will eventually need for

the back of the quilt. >>

Speaking for myself, in every restoration I do, I always put in fabric that

complements the existing ones– but is thoroughly modern. The first life of

the quilt was what happened after the maker finished it. With me, it enters a

new phase of existence as I manipulate blocks, repair pieces, replace fabrics

or what have you to increase the life span of the quilt. The quilt is now not

the sole “intellectual property” of the original maker. We share it. So I

put in a fabric (most people can’t even find them until I point them out) that

represents THIS period of the quilt’s life… I restored a 1930’s 9-patch.

It was born in the 1930’s but repaired and restored in the ’90’s and there are

some 1990’s fabrics to represent that. You’d have to be something of a fabric

detective to find them as they match– but it’s just my own fun thing to do

with an old top.

Of course, if it were museum quality I would never do such a thing!

As far as the backing, it would be a lot harder and more expensive to find

vintage fabric in quantity enough to back the quilt… or go to the flea

market and find an old quilt of the same vintage with a good back and

“harvest” it for your current project. I bought a beat-up and crooked 9-patch

for a song– because it had a great 1940’s white ground with blue and red

apple barrel patterns for the back in very good shape. Dumped the front….

the “batting” was old baby blankets sewn together… One is in the garage

that the cat has adopted; the other is folded as padding under a cushion on a

wicker settee… and I have the back waiting for when I need it on a 1940’s

top!

Still working on the turn-of-the-century Trip Around The World… it’s

turning out to be a scrap gem!

Best,

Lauri Klobas

Pacific PaKarendes, California


Date: Mon, 1 Feb 1999 11:36:07 EST

From: Baglady111@aol.com

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: subjects

Message-ID: 51bcc45.36b5d7f7@aol.com

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have we had a discussion on friendship quilts? When they were popular, why,

etc..also, THE ISLE OF MAN..I thought I had read something about the isle or

was it in a quilt mag…never fails…I’ll see something that does NOT

interest me at the time..but later…down the road…it appeals to me..Jane of

THE FEEDSACK CLUB


Date: Mon, 1 Feb 1999 09:49:09 -0800 (PST)

From: bevquilt@sprynet.com

Oops Rebecca, I meant Grandmother’s Flower Garden…..


Beverly Dunivent

http://home.sprynet.com/sprynet/bevquilt

Date: Mon, 1 Feb 1999 09:48:24 -0800 (PST)

From: bevquilt@sprynet.com

In answer to Rebecca’s question about replacing the pieces

in a Dresden Plate, in my opinion she could either use

reproduction or vintage fabric. I have seen pieces replaced

in these quilts with reproduction and if I hadn’t recognized

the fabric as being repro. I wouldn’t have guessed. On the

other hand it is always a bit nicer to use vintage fabric.

You can obtain this from The Kirk Collection. Bev.


Beverly Dunivent

http://home.sprynet.com/sprynet/bevquilt

Date: Mon, 01 Feb 1999 12:45:22 -0700

From: Sharon Harleman Tandy harleman@micron.net

Hi all,

Sorry to ring in late; been off-line for almost two months and

catching up. My mid-1940s quilt had a wool batt made from the fleece of

my two pet sheep, Punch and Judy. The batt was made locally (Washington

State coast, near Puyallup) and was covered with cheesecloth.

Unfortunately, I became allergic to wool and have kept them separated

for years. Now, I’d like to quilt the pink and white top (it was tied)

and have the batt cleaned and re-batted; it’s so thick, it will probably

make two regular batts! Have sources for such, just never get around to

it. Sharon Harleman Tandy, Quilts & Answers, Boise, Idaho.


Date: Mon, 1 Feb 1999 18:53:48 -0600

From: Dale E Watts dpwatts@ott.net

I would like to contact Carol Elmore of Manhattan, KS but am unable to find

her email address. This is in regard to the Quilt Restoration Conference in

Omaha.

If someone can provide me with her address or if Carol would contact me, I

would be most appreciative. Thank you!

Peggy in Ottawa


Date: Mon, 1 Feb 1999 20:35:42 EST

From: Baglady111@aol.com
I know you are’nt going to believe this..but I need a source for the white or

off white cotton that is a reproduction of the old timey feedsacks..it is for

toweling and pot holders…anyone one know of a wholesaler??? Jane of THE

FEEDSACK CLUB

(I heard that chuckle)


Date: Mon, 1 Feb 1999 22:28:02 -0800

From: “Edie Idleman” eidleman@ipa.net

Hi all, I am a lurker but need some info. I do not have the book

“Hidden in Plain View” yet. I understand that Dr. Dobard specifically

mentions Bear’s Paw, Crossroads, Flying Geese and Drundard’s Path were

used as signals. If that is so, will someone please let me know how

these designs and any others were used. I need this rather quickly as I

am doing a program for some 4th graders on Wednesday and they are

studying the Civil War.

My Barnes and Noble still has not gotten the books that they expect;

their computer says they are getting it, but still have not at this

time.

My program was about history and quilting in general until I heard they

were studying the Civil War and this is so appropriate that i think I

should talk about it with them.

Sure hope someone can help and thanks, edie idleman


Date: Tue, 2 Feb 1999 08:08:03 EST

From: JQuilt@aol.com

and so…the story goes

if you are in school and your teacher reads from a book and tells you… this

is part of Civil War History…you will probably think it’s absolutely

true…. and that’s how myths and legends begin and continue..

before I read/taught anything “historical” especially this book to

impressionable minds….I would preface it with…..this is a story not

history and it may or may not be true..even then there are some students who

will retain it as history…

jean

jquilt@aol.com


Date: Tue, 02 Feb 1999 09:36:09 -0500

From: Peggy Notestine notestine.11@osu.edu

Hi friends,

    Well, I got a real treat yesterday afternoon.  My husband's

grandmother (age 94) lives in a retirement home about 5 minutes from our

house and she mentioned that there was a lady down the hall who had a bunch

of old quilts. well, I passed along a note to her saying that I would love

to see them next time she aired them out. To make a long story shorter, I

got to see 10 quilts yesterday afternoon and they were all gorgeous! Most

were handpieced by Murl herself, and then in most instances either she or

one of her sister’s would handquilt it. She had two that were sent to

Missouri to be machine quilted in a really pretty design as far as machine

quilting goes, and another one she had hand quilted by a lady in Kentucky.

None had labels. Two remain very vivid in my mind. One was a saft, pale

yellow double wedding ring quilt in just the most beatiful colors. The

quilting was magnificant and I told her that I had always been a little

intimidated by that pattern because of the number of pieces and all those

curves. “This one?!”, she said, Why, that was done entirely by my little

sister before she was even a teenager! She thinks she was about 10 years

old when it was done….I just couldn’t believe it! Anyone ever hear of

little kids doing more complex patterns and with such beautiful stitching!?

The other quilt that really stood apart was a quilt Murl’s mother’s church

circle made as a raffle during the depression. This was a lone star( which

was never one of my favorites), and it was in pristine condition. A white

background and the diamonds were in white, nile green, hot pink and an

orange the color of an orange creamsickle. For some reason, those colors

worked for that quilt. The quilting was outstanding and the interesting

part of this story was that she said that her mother’s church circle spent

many hours on this quilt to raise money, then the depression hit very hard

where they all lived and no one could afford to even take a chance on a

ticket, so it just sat….and sat… and sat. Finally, her mother begged

her daughter to offer something to the circle so she saved up a dollar here

and there, and when she finally had 8.00 dollars, they happily gave her the

quilt. Unbelievable! I told her I would help her make labels for the

quilts, even if they don’t get sewn on, we could at least pin them to the

back. Each quilt was wrapped in a feed sack or pillowcase and I also

mentioned to her that Jane of the Feedsack Club was coming to our guild

meeting soon for a presentation and she thought that sounded very

interesting. Finally, I also wanted to mention that she had also displayed

a wonderful ivory crocheted bed spread that looked like lace, the stitches

were so tiny. She said it took her 12 years to make and that she worked on

it all the time. So that was my wonderful Sunday afternoon.

    Peggy Notestine in Columbus, Ohio

Date: Tue, 2 Feb 1999 14:08:59 -0000

From: “Sally Ward” sward@t-ward.demon.co.uk

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: And so the story goes…(NQR)

Message-ID: <003501be4ed0$c25ea820$eb58e4d4@bob>

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Here in the UK my 15 yr old daughter is about to take History exams which

include American history. Her teacher has suggested that the class watch

‘Dances with Wolves’ as part of their revision. Is this a good idea?

Sally


Date: Tue, 2 Feb 1999 21:50:56 -0000

From: “Sally Ward” sward@t-ward.demon.co.uk

So many of you responded to my question about this film I have to thank

you all here. All comments were very helpful, and gave my dd a renewed

perspective both on the history of America and the generosity of present

day Americans in taking time out to help her!

Thanks

Sally

Date: Wed, 3 Feb 1999 22:21:35 EST

From: Xroadclown@aol.com

My grandmother pieced and hand quilted her first quilt when she was 13. She

had the help of some of her cousins, and was so upset about the quality of the

work they did, that she ripped out their work overnight, and re-did it. She

would have been 121 now, and luckily i still have that quilt. It is a

tumbling block quilt. and i love it!!!

a new quilter, but it is in my blood!

melanie (xroadclown@aol.com)


Date: Wed, 3 Feb 1999 21:58:41 -0600

From: “GRichter” richter2@frontiernet.net

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: Re: Precocious quilters

Message-Id: 199902040405.XAA45300@node21.frontiernet.net

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>

In a message dated 2/2/99 10:36:19 PM Eastern Standard Time,

QHL-Digest-

request@cuenet.com writes:

>

<< Anyone ever hear of

little kids doing more complex patterns and with such beautiful

stitching!?

>

Hi,

What about the old needlework samplers? Weren’t they done by very

young girls learning embroidery, etc?

Gail R

in NE Wis.

richter2@frontiernet.net

kegar@aol.com


Date: Thu, 04 Feb 1999 07:24:20 +0400

From: Xenia Cord xecord@netusa1.net

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: Kids quilting

Message-ID: 36B912E3.62F7@netusa1.net

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When my granddaughter was 6, she wanted to make a quilt for mini-4H and

enter it at the county fair (10 years ago). I had given her my old

Singer 185J and taught her to sew lines on paper with an empty needle.

She and I carefully cut pieces for a small Nine Patch, and she sewed

them together and put on a border. Then we sandwiched the quilt and she

sewed diagonals through it by machine. I made binding and she sewed it

on, and I did the hand finishing. This took about 8 weeks of one step a

week.

On judging day she proudly entered her little quilt (about 12″ x 18″).

The judges couldn’t decide where to put it because Mini’s were not

“allowed” to enter the textiles division. So they put it with “Crafts”

and I actually saw the judge (a woman) pat my granddaughter on the head

and say, “That’s nice, dear,” as she dismissed the effort. Needless to

say, my granddaughter lost a lot of interest in quiltmaking – and in

4H!.

Xenia


Date: Thu, 4 Feb 1999 08:05:30 EST

From: JQuilt@aol.com

To: notestine.11@osu.edu,

wouldn’t the elderly quiltmaker in the retirement home make a perfect person

to invite to a guild meeting and have her display and tell stories about her

quilts?…… or maybe have someone go to the retirement home and make a video

tape of her and her quilts/stories?

jean

jquilt@aol.com


Date: Thu, 4 Feb 1999 08:30:15 EST

From: HKnight453@aol.com

get your stories on tape form the elderly about quilts, geneology, or anything

else, and make transcripts. I wish I had asked my Grandmother Knight more

about her family in Ireland, her childhood etc. She died at 93, with a

perfect memory, or nearly so. Ask now, or regret later. Most persons are

more than willing to talk on the record, and it’s a good way to preserve the

past…

Heather


Date: Thu, 4 Feb 1999 09:34:36 EST

From: JQuilt@aol.com

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: 1000 years ago

Message-ID: 4a25de5b.36b9affc@aol.com

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1000 years ago when I was 6 years old and lived in NYC…my mother began

teaching me needlework, knitting and crocheting…It was not unusual for girls

that age to learn these “homemaking” skills…..

I learned these wonderful crafts, so that I could make my dolls clothes, and

hankies for my aunts and grandmother…they were not for any competitions…my

dolls, aunts and grandmother all loved them and as a result I still love doing

all of them today..

competitions are not always the best avenue for children…..or grown ups, for

that matter.

jean

jquilt@aol.com


Date: Thu, 04 Feb 1999 09:52:58 +0000

From: Shirley McElderry tigersoup@lisco.net

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: Die-cut butterflies

Message-ID: 36B96DF7.164F@lisco.net

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Audrey and QHLers: The Warren Textile Co. in Boston, Mass offered

die-cut butterflies and other die-cut appliques such as pansies, tulips,

etc. in 1933 and 1934 in Comfort, Needlecraft, and a few other

periodicals. In an undated catalog of Warren’s are many different

appliques, including both large and small butterflies, in either plain

or prints. There is also a “Sunbonnet Duck” that is a real hoot!

I haven’t found any reference to die-cut quilt kits being sold before

1929; but that doesn’t necessarily mean there wasn’t any! (G)

Shirley Mc from Iowa


Date: Thu, 04 Feb 1999 11:08:53 -0800

From: Sue erroof@wcoil.com

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: Re: Die Cut Butterflies

Message-ID: 36B9F044.115294FB@wcoil.com

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Hi Audrey and All,

I have a one page advertisement from “Needlecraft – The Home Arts

Magazine” called the “Quilt Block Service Sheet” it shows not only the

die cut Butterflies, but also Star and Diamond Quilt Blocks, and Dahlia

Quilt Blocks. The adds actually say the blocks are “die cut”. The bad

news is there is no date on the sheet. The good news is the pictures are

definitely of 20’s and 30’s prints.

The prices are as follows:

    Star and Diamonds - 72 Gay print diamonds  39 cents.


    Gay Print Butterflies - 64  4 X 6 inch assortment 39 cents


                            30  8 1/4 X 6 inch assortment 39 cents


    Dahlia - 72 Gay print flower petals and 9 contrasting centers   

finished size 10 1/2 inches just the right size for a

            15 inch background block  39 cents.

The star and diamond block and the dahlia block are shown in the photo

button hole stitched.

Sue in gloomy, cold, NW Ohio


Date: Thu, 4 Feb 1999 09:56:38 -0800 (PST)

From: bevquilt@sprynet.com

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: Re: QHL-Digest Digest V99 #33

Message-Id: 199902041756.JAA16645@m9.sprynet.com

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Audrey and all kit quilt fans: I totally agree with Xenia

that many die-cut kits were sold during the 1920s and 30s. I

have many of these, including countless homeless die-cut

butterflies, in my collection. Anne Copeland and I also did

an article on kits for AQSG and ours is found in Uncoverings

  1. At the present time I am working on an article for

Chitra Publishing on the quilts of the 1930s and this

article will include more information on Butterfly quilts

made from kits and from scratch, and will include a pattern.

While I was working with RJR Fashion Fabrics on the

Butterfly Hope Collection last year I did research on

butterfly quilts and their meaning during the Depression. I

found them to be used as a sign of hope and new life for the

women of that era just as they are for many people today.

Beverly

Beverly Dunivent

HTTP://home.sprynet.com/sprynet/bevquilt

Date: Thu, 4 Feb 1999 18:53:28 -0000

From: “Sally Ward” <sward@t-ward.demon.co.uk

When each of my two children left primary school I made leavers quilts with

the top class as a once a week volunteer. First time they used a medley of

techniques according to their individual designs – I was amazed how well

some of the (otherwise fidgety and troublesome) boys could embroider and how

hard they all concentrated. The second time everyone made an ohio star

using a hand sewing machine and fabrics from their own clothes.

The quilts hang in the school hall and are stunning, I am very proud of the

kids who made them. However, the local Countrywomens Association meet

there, and on more than one occasion I have heard people remark how nice the

quilts are but such a shame the teacher ‘obvously did all the work’.

I have said before on another list, we should expect more of our children

not less. We are never surprised how adept they are at computer games et al,

so why do we think they can’t sew?

Sally in UK


Date: Thu, 04 Feb 1999 13:30:24 -0700

From: Adella <adellaharris@earthlink.net

The discussion about butterfly patterns caught my eye as I am working

with a local community hospice to plan a commemorative quilt. One of

our volunteers suggested a butterfly theme just yesterday. And today on

the digest I read:

bevquilt@sprynet.com wrote:

>

While I was working with RJR Fashion Fabrics on the

Butterfly Hope Collection last year I did research on

butterfly quilts and their meaning during the Depression. I

found them to be used as a sign of hope and new life for the

women of that era just as they are for many people today.

Beverly

>

Does anyone on the mailing list have a suggestion for finding butterfly

die-cuts or patterns? Thanks!


Date: Thu, 4 Feb 1999 16:31:25 -0800

From: “pepper cory” pepcory@bmd.clis.com

To: QHL@cuenet.com

I agree that we under-estimate what kids are capable of doing and what they

want to do. I have a friend named Marie, now in her late 60’s, who pieced

her first quilt, a Grandmother’s Flower Garden, when she was seven years

old. Her mother did help her quilt it, I think. She’s never stopped

quilting and still makes beautiful Flower Garden quilts all by hand. She

says it’s relaxing!

Pepper Cory


Date: Fri, 05 Feb 1999 08:37:05 -0700

From: Sven Olsson <sven@pnc.com.au

I have a wonderful 8yr old neice, Elizabeth, whose mother died when she

was just 3yrs old. She and her brother Tristan (now 11) have been raised

by a wonderful father who is a brilliant Dad.

Over the 5 years since their mother’s death, I have had the children

stay over a number of times, and each time Elizabeth wants to play in my

fabrics. When she was about 4yrs, we sat all one day and made a clown

face doll quilt. Elizabeth cut the fabrics and placed them on a large

piece of muslin to make the face, and I machine appliqued the pieces

down. We used colouful buttons and bits of lace and ended up with

“Lizzies Clown Quilt”.

Lately nothing had been said about fabrics or quilts, so I have not

pressed the point. That was until the week before Christmas. Her answer

to the usual “what would you like for Christmas” was, “Can you teach me

to make a real quilt”

We now have five Ohio Star blocks made from fabric that Elizabeth chose.

It is going to be a full sized quilt, and hopefully finished in time for

her 9th birthday in April. We will tie it, as I am not a quilter.

Lizzies dad is remarrying in March and she will be with me for 2 weeks.

I am so lucky.

Lorraine in Oz


Date: Thu, 04 Feb 1999 17:37:24 -0500

From: Nancy Roberts <robertsn@norwich.net

Hello to all. I’m still cleaning and reorganizing my sewing room. This time I

came across two scrapbooks, each containing more than 30 pages of patterns

and clippings from the 1970’s. A friend purchased them at a church jumble

sale, so I don’t have the history of whose they were. Some of the magazines

represented include Women’s Circle, Women’s Household, Family Circle, Women’s

Day, and Girl Scout Leader. The latter has a piece in it about bicentennial

quiltmaking. There’s also an article about Ernest B. Haight, “father” of

machine quilting. Many of the clippings are glued down to pages while others

are paper-clipped or loose.

When I first looked them over, I didn’t think they were all that old.

However, they’re nearly a quarter of a century. Hmmmm… I feel dated all of

a sudden.

They’re fun to look through, but I don’t care to keep them any longer. If you

collect ephemera like this and are interested, make me a trade offer of

fabric from your stash (your choice). I would also need postage to mail these

items to you. I don’t think they’ll make weight for the $3.20 priority mail,

but would probably come in around $5 or $6. I can check this when I know the

zip code they’ll go to.

E-mail me if these old-time scrapbooks sound like something that belongs in

your collection. Hope someone will enjoy them. Nancy


Date: Thu, 04 Feb 1999 20:11:44 -0600

From: Valerie Davis vpse@globaldialog.com

To: Sally Ward <sward@t-ward.demon.co.uk

Dear Sally,

Viewing "Dances With Wolves" would be an entertaining way for students to

learn about American history IF, and this is a big if, they are made aware

in the beginning that it is very idealized. . . Indians all good, white men

all bad. Neither case is true. However, the movie was celebrated as one of

the few Hollywood movies which depicted the Native American in a more

realistic, humanistic way. I have read that all the props used (iron tools

etc.) were authenticated reproductions. Just my opionion.

Valerie

Sally Ward wrote:

Here in the UK my 15 yr old daughter is about to take History exams which

include American history. Her teacher has suggested that the class watch

‘Dances with Wolves’ as part of their revision. Is this a good idea?

>

Sally

Date: Thu, 04 Feb 1999 20:57:26 -0600

From: Russell-Hill russhill@ctesc.net

To: Valerie Davis vpse@globaldialog.com

Valerie Davis wrote:

>

Dear Sally,

Viewing "Dances With Wolves" would be an entertaining way for students

Hi Everyone,

Well as someone who does reenacting I have a problem with a lot of the

movies all though I must say that they have improved a great deal in the

last few years. There is a very good made for TV movie and that is the

Buffillo Soldier. That maybe a little closer to true. There are far

better documentaries out there from the History Channel than Hollywood.

It is if we should look at some of the movies made about England as

being historically correct. I am sure that you would find many of them

to be incorrect as well.

This is my .02 of course the clothes are incorrect most of the time.

Debbie


Date: Thu, 4 Feb 1999 22:53:54 -0500 (EST)

From: “Joanna E. Evans” jevans@bluemarble.net

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Hello:

My twin five-year-old boys go to a wonderful Montessori school where they

have been doing lots of fine motor activities like sewing. They also

learned to use an iron at school (when they were 4 years old) before I had

the nerve to try it.

Last year they started making four patches with me. I leave the bin of the

fabrics (mostly 30s reproduction conversation prints that they have chosen

at quilt shows) along with their other bins of toys. Whenever they pull it

out, I help them with their projects. I try to keep it simple, light, and

fun. They choose and iron two fabrics. They or I mark their squares. They

cut the fabric. I pin their squares with safety pins; they prick themselves

enough with the needle. And we always use a 1/2 inch seam allowance so when

a cutting line isn’t followed exactly or a stitch goes astray, it is no big

deal. Recently, I did a program on antique quilts for their class (of 3 to

6 year olds) at school. And now the children are working on making

classroom quilt tops. (I will machine quilt them for strength; they have to

be machine washed each week.)

On Tuesday evening, I took my sons to our guild meeting since my babysitter

canceled. The president asked me to introduce them, so I did and I showed

some of their completed work. They spent some time watching a portable tv

(with earphones) and then came and sat on my lap for show and tell. (They

wanted to see the quilts more than the movie. Yea!) Fortunately they were

not disruptive; I would have left immediately (and they knew it) if they

had been.

Tonight at a school gathering, I was surprised when the mother (a quilter

herself) of a 7 year old boy told me that her stepson (whose mother died

when he was 4) has been asking her to teach him to quilt. She had told him

maybe when he was older. He replied that he had been sewing since he was

three (at school). She said that after seeing what my boys had done, she

went home and told him that she would start helping now. I hope they have

as much fun with it as we have. Quilts are important to my boys and I hope

they always will be.

I get so upset when I hear of people like the woman Xenia described who

cause so much damage with so little effort. I think it is important for

children to be exposed to a wide variety of activities and to be encouraged

to follow their interests (and to have a chance to see ours). I’ll step

down from my soapbox now. Thanks for listening.

Joanna


Date: Thu, 04 Feb 1999 23:00:10 -0800

From: Audrey Waite <awquiltr@sedona.net

Hi Adella:

Just by coincidence I received an advertisement in the mail today from

Foust Textiles Inc., P. O. Box 576, Kings Mountain, NC 28086 for

precision-cut patchwork fabric quilting pieces. They’re called

“Granny’s Quilting Shapes”. You can reach them at 1-800-258-9816, FAX

1-800-358-3949 or www.foustextiles.com (no affiliation,etc.) They may

be wholesale only but they can probably tell you where you can purchase

these shapes. There are diamonds, squares, heart appliques, triangles,

squares, hexagons, bow tie, lancaster rose, tumbling blocks, birds in

flight, dresden plate, butterfly (not as pretty as the ones from the

30s!) baby blocks and tulip.

Thanks to everyone for the information on the die-cut butterfly. I’ll

pass it along to my friend. You are all so knowledgeable and gracious

in sharing information you have.

Audrey Waite in rainy Sedona, AZ (boy did we need it!)


Date: Fri, 5 Feb 1999 07:50:53 EST

From: @aol.com

Sally –

If you can find it, Ken Burns’s documentary series =The Civil War= is a superb

(if long) account of our great national tragedy. A fictionalized version of

the climactic battle of the Civil War, Gettsburg, is the movie of the same

name – very accurate, very literate, and beautifully acted and cast. All

the extras were members of Civil War re-enactment groups, and their uniforms

and equipment are completely accurate.

As for a movie about Native Americans…my vote goes to =Last of the

Mohicans,= set during the French & Indian War (aka the Seven Years War).

Native American activist Russell Means plays Chingachgook, the Mohican chief,

and all the Native American extras were actually members of local tribes.

The props, sets and costumes were again quite accurate (although I have some

trouble with Daniel Day-Lewis’s hair, as gorgeous and charismatic as he is).

The movie itself is about as romantic as it’s possible to get…and yes, the

Appalachian mountains do look like that.

I can’t think of any good documentaries about the Revolution, although Burns

made a terrific film about Thomas Jefferson a few years ago. It came out

before the DNA evidence connecting him to Sally Hemings’s children, though.

Good luck – I’ll try to think of more.

Karen Evans


Date: Fri, 5 Feb 1999 08:06:45 EST

From: JQuilt@aol.com

To: QUILTNET@LSV.UKY.EDU, qhl@cuenet.com

for anyone going to lancaster the following website is great for info about

Lancaster.

http://www.pavisnet.com/lancaster/

jean

jquilt@aol.com


Date: Fri, 5 Feb 1999 08:15:21 EST

From: JQuilt@aol.com

thank you so much for the foust textile address …you left out a t in the

website address

www.fousttextiles.com

jean

jquilt@aol.com


Date: Fri, 05 Feb 1999 08:18:59 +0400

From: Xenia Cord <xecord@netusa1.net

Uncoverings is the annual journal of the American Quilt Study Group.

Membership is relatively inexpensive, the annual conventions are full of

energy and teeming with interesting people, all of whom are high on

quilt research and quilt history

Xenia, who gives herself a membership each year for her birthday!


Date: Fri, 05 Feb 1999 08:18:13 PST

From: “Kim Heger” <kheger@hotmail.com

Joanna, I think that’s wonderful that you and your boys are so involved

with quilting! Awesome-they chose the quilts over the movie–I love it!

I had my 5th grade social studies class make a quilt when we were

studying pioneer. Several teachers thought, “Oh, she’ll never be able

to get the boys involved.” I had 100% participation from every child!

I even had the mother of one boy tell me that he was so excited about

his quilt block and he told her about the progress he had made everyday

when he went home from school. And this was one of the “cool” kids,

too! Quilting is something even kids can identify with because most all

of them have a loved blanket from childhood. Many of my students even

brought theirs in to share with the class! Needless to say, that was

the most enjoyable unit I’ve ever taught!

Kim Heger

southwest Kansas

Date: Thu, 4 Feb 1999 22:53:54 -0500 (EST)

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Hello:

My twin five-year-old boys go to a wonderful Montessori school where

they

have been doing lots of fine motor activities like sewing. They also

learned to use an iron at school (when they were 4 years old) before I

had

the nerve to try it.

Last year they started making four patches with me. I leave the bin of

the

fabrics (mostly 30s reproduction conversation prints that they have

chosen

at quilt shows) along with their other bins of toys. Whenever they pull

it

out, I help them with their projects. I try to keep it simple, light,

and

fun. They choose and iron two fabrics. They or I mark their squares.

They

cut the fabric. I pin their squares with safety pins; they prick

themselves

enough with the needle. And we always use a 1/2 inch seam allowance so

when

a cutting line isn’t followed exactly or a stitch goes astray, it is no

big

deal. Recently, I did a program on antique quilts for their class (of 3

to

6 year olds) at school. And now the children are working on making

classroom quilt tops. (I will machine quilt them for strength; they have

to

be machine washed each week.)

On Tuesday evening, I took my sons to our guild meeting since my

babysitter

canceled. The president asked me to introduce them, so I did and I

showed

some of their completed work. They spent some time watching a portable

tv

(with earphones) and then came and sat on my lap for show and tell.

(They

wanted to see the quilts more than the movie. Yea!) Fortunately they

were

not disruptive; I would have left immediately (and they knew it) if they

had been.

Tonight at a school gathering, I was surprised when the mother (a

quilter

herself) of a 7 year old boy told me that her stepson (whose mother died

when he was 4) has been asking her to teach him to quilt. She had told

him

maybe when he was older. He replied that he had been sewing since he was

three (at school). She said that after seeing what my boys had done, she

went home and told him that she would start helping now. I hope they

have

as much fun with it as we have. Quilts are important to my boys and I

hope

they always will be.

I get so upset when I hear of people like the woman Xenia described who

caus so much damage with so little effort. I think it is important for

children to be exposed to a wide variety of activities and to be

encouraged

to follow their interests (and to have a chance to see ours). I’ll step

down from my soapbox now. Thanks for listening.

Joanna


Date: Fri, 5 Feb 1999 11:26:13 EST

From: Palampore@aol.com

I just ordered and received a NEW palampore from the PAST TIMES Catalog. They

call it a Tree of Life Cotton Throw (108″ X 70″). It is a lightweight cotton

fabric. It is really very pretty. What a lovely catalog. Anyone who loves

beautiful textiles will enjoy it. I could spend tons of money with those

folks. For anyone who wants their catalog it is: 1-800-621-6020 I am not

advertising because I have no connection with this company.

I will be taking a class tomorrow under the direction of Pepper Cory on

quilting. Can hardly wait!!!

If any of you have pictures of, or patterns of 1800’s “huswif” sewing cases or

other rolled sewing cases I would love to hear from you. I am interested in

civilian and military rolled sewing cases. (I guess the words case or kit can

be used.)

Thanks, Lynn Lancaster Gorges in New Bern, NC palampore@aol.com


Date: Fri, 05 Feb 1999 16:50:45 -0600

>

I agree that we under-estimate what kids are capable of doing and what they

want to do. I have a friend named Marie, now in her late 60’s, who pieced

her first quilt, a Grandmother’s Flower Garden, when she was seven years

old.

Pepper,

    My mother started her first quilt when she was 4!


    Not surprising she started me on quiltmaking when I was 8......

>

Jocelyn

ocelynm@delphi.com


Date: Fri, 05 Feb 1999 19:21:53 -0600

From: “Kris Driessen, Hickory Hill Quilts” oldquilt@albany.net

Does anyone know anything about this site?

http://www.quiltcollector.com/

It looks interesting, but I don’t recognize any of the names connected

with it.

Kris


Date: Fri, 05 Feb 1999 21:35:09 +0400

From: Xenia Cord <xecord@netusa1.net

To Kris and QHL – I tried that new site: http://www.quiltcollector.com/

The name Diane Leone is certainly familiar – in the early 1990s her name

was on the selvedges of every good piece of double pink and related

seaweed calicoes made! Her collection, if it is auctioned as promised,

should be something to see and participate in.

No association – just a comment.

Xenia

Date: Sat, 6 Feb 1999 09:07:29 -0000

From: “Sally Ward” <sward@t-ward.demon.co.uk

This is the name on the spine of one of the best beginner instruction =

books I have come across – The New Sampler Quilt.

Sally


Date: Sat, 06 Feb 1999 08:32:32 +0400

From: Xenia Cord <xecord@netusa1.net

May I inject an historical note about the current fad for “Civil War”

fabrics? BQL (Bristish Quilt List) may not find this a burning issue,

but in the US we should not let romanticism cloud our understanding. I

think in our interest in creating ever-new design fields for fabric

reproduction, we have lost sight of the fact that few – if any – cotton

dress goods were produced in the US (read northern states) during the

Civil War. After all, raw cotton was a southern product that was not

being shipped north for manufacturing, and the north was blockading

southern ports to keep ships from carrying raw cotton to England for

production. This was an attempt, of course, to cripple the South’s

economic base; at the same time, English-made cotton goods (and related

sources) were not being imported into the northern states because

England was sympathetic to the southern cause.

Small amounts of raw cotton were being shipped from Utah and other

areas outside the States (Utah was still a territory). Mountain Mist,

for instance, got its raw cotton for ammunition cartridges, gas masks,

quilt batting and mattresses from Utah. But supply, distance, and

difficult transportation made this a token source compared with what had

been available from the south.

Bottom line? We probably should not be talking about “Civil War”

fabrics, but rather “C.W.-era” cotton prints, pre-1861, and in the

latter years of the 1860s, as production and manufacturing were

haltingly resumed. What do the rest of you think?

Xenia


Date: Sat, 6 Feb 1999 10:53:34 -0600

From: Dale E Watts <dpwatts@ott.net

I am searching for an address for Rocky Mt. Quilts in Grand Junction, CO.

Betsy Telford is the owner I do believe.

If anyone can supply her address, please email me privately. Thank you so much.

Peggy


Date: Sat, 06 Feb 1999 14:48:10 -0600

From: Russell-Hill <russhill@ctesc.net

Hi all,

Well I quess I will put my two cents in on this. I have done some

research of the period for correct clothing. The mills in Massachusetts

were still running and were producing cotton during that time. Ladies

groups up North were not in such straights as the South and were able to

make the quilts for the SanCom and shirts and such. the South was to a

point near the wars end of making their own fabric and tearing up their

linens to make things for their soldiers. At almost $20 a yard the

south was suffering. It was written that a woman in the South saw a

piece of cotton for $20 a yard and bought 5 yards just because she could

not stand to be with out such nice fabric anymore. This was near the

end of the war.

Now the production of cotton may not have been as great as it was prior

to the war but the North was able to do it. This is were things failed

for the South. With out industry as in the North they could not take

the raw and turn it into a product for sale. Sherman said “The North can

make a steam engine, locomotive, or railway car ; yet hardly a yard of

cloth or a pair of shoes you ( the South) can make”. So even if cotton

would not come from England it came from New England. I believe a lot

of fabric also came from France.

Debbie


ate: Sat, 6 Feb 1999 16:58:19 -0500

From: Steve Greco <GrandmasAttic@compuserve.com

  First, does anyone have any information regarding the Nancy Cabot

advertisements for patterns that were in the Chicago Tribune newspaper in

the 30s and 40s? I have “inherited” tons of booklets with Nancy Cabot

patterns and Nancy Cabot advertisements in them. These came from the estate

of Wilma Smith who was quite the quilt historian before her death in the

early 1990s. I would like to be able to continue the research but don’t

want to “reinvent the wheel” if it’s already out there. Perhaps someone

can guide me to more information. I would like specifically information

regarding the three women who wrote the column and sources for where I

might go to learn more.

Secondly, does anyone have any information about Edna Van Dos. Edna

published a series of “scrapbooks” under the name of Dutch Girl

Publications (at least I think that’s the title–the actual scrapbooks are

at home and I’m at work on the computer trying to remember all this stuff).

This was during the 1970s. Edna Van Dos was also a very big quilt pattern

historian and very active with this. Edna Van Dos and Wilma Smith were

correspondents who collaborated with each other at times and shared

information. This is how I came to know about Edna. An early subscriber to

Edna’s “scrapbooks” was Cuesta Barberry (are you on our list?). I am

familiar with Cuesta’s wonderful work through Quilter’s Newsletter magazine

and other sources and am awed by the knowledge that she has as well! (If

you’re on this list Cuesta, thanks for writing such great articles!j)

Thirdly, if any of you have any information about Wilma Smith herself, I

would be very grateful. I know some things about her but not a great deal.

It is Wilma’s collection of goodies that I was able to purchase at a garage

sale (and not before some of it was pilfered by local antique dealers) that

has inspired me to continue on with quilt research and documentation.

Rachel Greco

Grandma’s Attic Sewing Emporium

155 SW Court Street

Dallas, OR 97338

1-503-623-0451

e-mail: GrandmasAttic@compuserve.com

I would be grateful for any information that you have.


Date: Sat, 6 Feb 1999 16:58:21 -0500

From: Steve Greco GrandmasAttic@compuserve.com

I just want to reiterate what Heather said about getting your stories down

on tape from the elderly about quilts, genealogy or anything else and make

transcripts. My grandmother died at the age of 85 this past October. I was

in the process of typing up everything she ever told me, doing scrapbooks

on genealogy, information on quilting, etc. I thought I had a ton of

information. Ever since she passed on I keep wondering “why wasn’t I

listening? how come I didn’t think to get more information?” As Heather so

aptly put it, “Ask now or regret later!”

Rachel Greco

Grandma’s Attic Sewing Emporium, Inc.

155 SW Court Street

Dallas, OR 97338

1-503-623-0451

e-mail: GrandmasAttic@compuserve.com


Date: Sat, 06 Feb 1999 20:30:38 -0600

From: Matti2000@aol.com (

Hello quilters…I am brand new to this list and I have a question…I am

working on a play about the Underground RR that will be presented to

elementary schools in NY state and PA…I need to find info about quilts being

used as signals…Any suggestions?


Date: Sat, 6 Feb 1999 21:40:35 EST

From: KareQuilt@aol.com

Dear QHL readers,

Have you heard about the Smithsonian seminar March 19-20? Sounds like a real

treat. I just got my announcement Friday. The title is : “Common Threads:

Creating A Cloth For Empowerment.”

“An International Symposium: The Role of Textile Collectives in Women’s

Empowerment And Recent Research on African-American Quilters.”

The Group for Cultural Documentation (TGCD) is co-sponsoring it with the

Smithsonian Institution’s Center for Folklife Programs and Cultural Studies,

and the Smithsonians’ Anacostia Museum and Center for African American History

and Culture. The flyer reads:

“We will bring together an international group of representatives of women’s

groups that have coalesced around textile work…Included groups and their

work…Alabama Freedom Quilting Bee, Mississippi Cultural Crossroads Quilters,

Cabin Creek Quilters, Tierra Wools, Native American quilting groups, and Hmong

textile groups, Africa (including Zamani Soweto Sisters of South Africa and

Liberia’s Arthington Women’s Self-Help Quilting Group), Latin America

(Chilean,Columbian and Peruvian groups), Eastern Europe, Asia, and Australia.

The common thread among these groups across th globe is that quilting,

weaving, and the creation of similar tapestry works plays a central role in

their efforts to empower women….

Recent research on African-American quilts…A panel is anticiapted to include

Cuesta Benberry [1983 Quilters Hall of Fame Honoree], Raymond Dobard, Roland

L. Freeman, and Carolyn Mazloomi.

To pre-register ($10) make check out to TGCD and mail to 117 Ingraham St., NW,

Washington, DC 20011. PH: (202) 882-7764; FAX: (202) 829-6814. Their mailing

also includes a list of those representing each ethnic group and one page on

Roland Freeman’s book and national exhibtion schedule.

I saw Mr. Freeman’s exhibit, ” A Communion of Spirits: African-American

Quilters, Preservers, and Their Stories” a coupl of weeks ago at the

Smithsonian. I loved his book, which I read some time ago, and found the

exhibit very exciting. Just today I registered for the Common Threads

seminar.

Karen Alexander

Research Focus: Quilts of the Shenandoah Valley

Member of AQSG since 1981

Date: Sat, 06 Feb 1999 20:54:41 -0600

From: KAREN BUSH <Birdsong@worldnet.att.net

Not to mention, on this documentary, you can listen to Shelby Foote

narrate…what a voice… West Virginia drawal like smoooooth

molasses……got the whole set and watch and listen to it all the time

while I’m quilting….aaaaaaaahhhhhhhhhhh….:) kb

— if you can find it, Ken Burns’s documentary series =The Civil War= is

a superb

(if long) account of our great national tragedy. A fictionalized version of


Date: Sun, 07 Feb 1999 18:32:52 +1100

From: nomad1 <nomad1@ibm.net

Dear Debbie, Karen and All,

Over here in Oz guess what I watched and recorded last night?

Gettysburg! Karen thanks so much for giving that added info about the

costumes etc being accurate. I was thrilled as my 11 yr son John

Frederick watched it with me and commented on the sadness of war.

Needless to say I have a million answered questions now!

Debbie, in regards to prices of fabrics during the civil war and your

comment:

” At almost $20 a yard the south was suffering. It was written that a

woman in the South saw a piece of cotton for $20 a yard and bought 5

yards just because she could not stand to be with out such nice fabric

anymore.”

It might interest you all to know that here in Australia, this or even

$22 is what we are paying for the Civil War fabrics, as well as other

great quilting fabrics e.g Shelburne museum collection, Moda’s,

Hoffman’s etc ! And exactly, as that lady in the South mentioned, at

times we do buy a lot and spend huge amounts as at times we just feel we

cannot do without a particular fabric! Imagine the guilt we go through

with UFO’s at this price!!

TTFN, Hiranya :> from Sydney, Australia

P.S. Re Diane Leon’s wonderful quilts for sale, I want to contact a

museum here so that, that c.1880Aussie quilt hopefully can be purchased

and brought home as we have such a minuscule quantity of such Aussie

Quilt treasures.


Date: Sun, 07 Feb 99 00:43:08 PST

From: “dhaynes5” <dhaynes5@rmi.net


Date: Sun, 07 Feb 1999 08:52:30 -0500

From: “jawhite@courant.infi.net” jawhite@courant.infi.net

To: Quilt History list QHL@cuenet.com

I sounds like you have done extensive research into this subject;

however, $20.00 a yard for cotton fabric is a hefty price today. I

can’t imagine a Southern lady, particularly during the end time of the

Civil War, paying $20.00 a yard for fabric, let alone $100.00 for five

yards. Just an observation.

Judy White – CT


Date: Sun, 7 Feb 1999 09:41:22 EST

From: QuiltFixer@aol.com

Just had to share that I just purchased a very interesting Redwork Quilt that

has all the blocks from the 1901 Pan American Exposition in Brooklyn, NY What

an exciting addition to my Redwork Program and collection. It has the most

marvelous buildings that were built just for the exposition. Sadly, it is

also remembered for being the place where President McKinley was shot. It has

the President and his wife, Vice President Teddy Roosevelt and his wife, and

the building where McKinley was shot. I owe a great big thank you to our

member, Eileen Trestain, (who, by the way is the author of “Dating Fabrics.”)

Eileen alerted me about the quilt and I finally chased it down in Illinois.

This really ties in with my Program Title which is “Redwork, History

Revisited.” Just had to share this little bit of happiness and excitement with

you.

Toni Baumgard

QuiltFixer@aol.com


Date: Sun, 07 Feb 1999 10:01:56 +0400

From: Xenia Cord <xecord@netusa1.net

For those of us who are building libraries of quilt history books, may I

recomment Old Nova Scotian Quilts (1995), a museum catalog by Scott

Robson and Sharon MacDonald. It is based on the collection of the Nova

Scotia Museum (Robson is a curator), with some additions. Seems well

researched (MacDonald) and beautifully photographed, with lots of

additional historical and biographical data, photos, diagrams and so on

  • a nice look at Nova Scotian quilting life and history. A printed

endorsement from Nancy Cameron Armstrong on the back cover.

Because of NS’s geographic, social, and political connections in

history, the quilts show relationships to British quilts as well as to

those of New England. And those ties are noted and discussed.

I got my copy through Dave McGee, at http://www.angelfire.com/ns/books

I have just emailed him and he reports that there are only a few copies

available, and that the museum has only a few and no plans at present ot

reprint. Back cover shows a price of $24.95; 112 pages with extensive

endnotes, bibliography of primary and secondary sources, and index.

No association, just a satisfied customer who is happy to add this book

to a growing library.

Xenia


Date: Sun, 7 Feb 1999 15:28:34 -0000

From: “Sally Ward” sward@t-ward.demon.co.uk


Date: Sun, 07 Feb 1999 07:55:23 -0800

From: “Julia D. Zgliniec” rzglini1@san.rr.com

To: russhill@ctesc.net

CC: Xenia Cord xecord@netusa1.net, BQL@onelist.com, QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: Re: QHL: “Civil War” fabrics

Message-ID: 36BDB76A.9659F7ED@san.rr.com

Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii

Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

Dear Debbie and All,

I can recommend an excellent book that discusses textile production in

the south and addresses the Civil War Era. It is:

Mississippi Homespun – Nineteenth Century Textiles and the Women Who

Made Them. Mary Edna Lohrenz and Anita Miller Stamper. 1989.

Mississippi Department of Archives and History. ISBN 0-938896-56-3


Date: Sun, 07 Feb 1999 09:16:21 +0000

From: Bobbie Aug qwltpro@uswest.net

To: dhaynes5 dhaynes5@rmi.net

CC: Dale E Watts dpwatts@ott.net, QHL QHL@cuenet.com


Date: Sun, 7 Feb 1999 11:36:46 EST

From: Cml791@aol.com

While researching family history in Marion Co., AL I came across some

information about a thread manufacturer that was rebuilt in 1868, the original

having been burned during the Civil War. About 30 people worked on its

spindle outlay as cotton fiber was woven into thread. The thread was peddled

all over Alabama by ox cart. The name was Allen’s Factory. The article said

it was a thriving factory for many years but I don’t know if that was pre- or

post-civil war or a combination.

Carolyn in spring-like Texas


Date: Sun, 07 Feb 1999 10:41:32 -0600

From: Laura Hobby Syler <texas_quilt.co@mail.airmail.net

I too have to add a comment here. My grandmother turned 94 this past

September and it just so happened that my 12 YO DD had to do a “Gift of

Age” interview…with someoneover the age of “50” for her language class.

Her teacher is a sweet young thing of 22 …..anyway we started the

interview at Susie Violet’s birthday party with my mother and aunt present

and finished it up 2 weeks later at my grandmothers residence at Juliet

Fowler Home for the Aged……we found that she never had a drivers

license, but she did drive the car once, 12 miles to visit her parents when

my grandfather was working at Ft. Hood in Killeen…she was born in Texas,

lived in Temple or around Central Texas and never visited the Capitol

building in Austin until last year when my mother took her and my daughters

to see the renovation. She also never had seen the ocean until my mother

and aunt took her for her first plane ride to Galveston on her 90th

birthday …..she had all kinds of wonderful stories to tell about growing

up on the farm, picking cotton and making quilts, pictures of the log house

that they live in for a year or so in 1913 in Kingsville in South Texas

(where the wolf came in and licked her on the face and when she woke,

jumped back out the window…..)

I transcribed it and we color copied all of the old photos that were

applicable to the text and Kaitlyn made a 110 on the project. Her teacher

copied it as an example of what they were looking for for future

classes……Unfortunately, my other grandparents (My GF worked for the

Agriculture department and traveled all over the world, and to Russia and

stayed with Kruchev at his “palace” back in the 40’s or 50’s…see I

dont’even know exactly when) they passed away when I was in high school

and didn’t appreciate or understand the importance of their

experiences…..I’m thoroughly convinced that God created us backwards,

when we have the energy to do things we don’t have the wisdom to see the

opportunity. When we have the wisdom we don’t have the energy or the

opprotunity is gone…….

Laura

.At 04:58 PM 2/6/99 -0500, you wrote:

I just want to reiterate what Heather said about getting your stories down

on tape from the elderly about quilts, genealogy or anything else and make

transcripts. My grandmother died at the age of 85 this past October. I was

in the process of typing up everything she ever told me, doing scrapbooks

on genealogy, information on quilting, etc. I thought I had a ton of

information. Ever since she passed on I keep wondering “why wasn’t I

listening? how come I didn’t think to get more information?” As Heather so

aptly put it, “Ask now or regret later!”

>

Rachel Greco

Grandma’s Attic Sewing Emporium, Inc.

155 SW Court Street

Dallas, OR 97338

1-503-623-0451

e-mail: GrandmasAttic@compuserve.com

>

>

>


Date: Sun, 07 Feb 1999 10:42:43 -0600

From: Russell-Hill <russhill@ctesc.net

Yes it is true. I have to say that having grown up and lived up North

most of my life I never realized how much the South suffered. Now that

I live in TX and learn of the atrostities that happened to many who

lived in my town during the War and having talked with many Southern

folk who reenact and have researched the war in the South I am learning

more. Think about it. CT really never had a battle fought there. MA

where I am from never had to suffer a battle of the CW. We were not

refugees like so many from the South. We didn’t have soldiers coming

into our homes and stealing any of our goods reither we were black or

white. I could go on, I am beginning to understand why the South well

some of the South feels the way it does over this horrible time.

we go out there on Weekends and play but we are also trying to educate

the public as to the horrors of that war and to not let it happen

again. We are part of a medical unit and if we can look out over the

crowd as we do our senerios and watch the faces and find one or two with

tears in their eyes or see terror in their eyes we have done our “job”.

The more people we can touch the better and we are getting our message

across. I will get off my soap box for now.

Debbie


Date: Sun, 07 Feb 1999 11:48:52 -0500

From: “jawhite@courant.infi.net” jawhite@courant.infi.net

I just want to add a little note to this thread. Both of my parents are

still living and in their 80’s and the last time I went home, I asked my

dad to write down everything he could remember about his relatives (he

is the surviving member of 8 children.) So he did that for me, but when

I got back to New England, I had many questions because I realized that

a lot of what he wrote down was different from what he had told me

orally over the years. This precipitated many phone calls. The point

is when you finally get the information, whether on tape or on paper,

don’t put it away until a later date. Please look at it immediately

because I guarantee you will probably have a lot of questions that

require more answers.

Another thing – I’m sure we all have boxes and albums of pictures of

people in our family and our parents have these same boxes and albums of

people that we don’t even know. Ask them to put the names of the people

on the pictures and a date, at leastthe year the picture was taken. The

longer they wait to do this, the less they remember who some of these

people are in the photographs and that information will be lost to us

forever. In my case, I am an only child so I have no one else to ask

who may remember.

Judy White


Date: Sun, 07 Feb 1999 12:29:10 +0400

From: Xenia Cord <xecord@netusa1.net

As a sidebar to the discussion on recording your family histories, are

you all aware of a project called “Boxes Under the Bed”? It is a

national movement to record – at the grass roots level – the personal

histories of quilters, and to analyze the boxes of quilt ephemera we all

have, and that we use for inspiration and patterns. The project was

begun by the Alliance for American Quilts (remember the Smithsonian

quilt controversy?) and the Library of Congress National Folklife

Center. They have embarked on an ambitious plan to teach quilters at

the local level to interview themselves and their friends, to archive

the collected interviews at the local level, and to use those materials

in a meaningful way. They provide professional instructions, handouts,

and interview examples at the sessions they teach.

I do have an interest in this. A session of Boxes Under the Bed will be

offered at Quilt America in July, and will be led by Merikay Waldvogel.

Shelly Zegart (Alliance member) will introduce the session, Indiana

University folklorist Dr. Susanne Ridlen will demonstrate interviewing

techniques while interviewing a long-time quilter, and Merikay will be

facilitator, analyze the ephemera shared by those attending, and share

her expertise on our place in our own quilt history.

This session will be offered on Saturday, July 10, all day (9-12, 2-5).

I think it is a great chance for all of us to share with our guilds and

quilting groups the importance of documenting ourselves. Anyone

interested can email me privately.

Xenia


Date: Sun, 7 Feb 1999 10:43:25 -0700

From: Elaine Baglo <elainb@pinc.com

I’d like to add my .02 cents worth in here too. Like in Australia, the

fabric prices in Canada are outrageous too. Here in Victoria, the prices

start around $17.98 a metre and go up. If you want to buy some of the

Japanese fabrics, the prices are sometimes as high as $26. a metre.

Needless to say, a lot of quilters make do with fq’s of fabric rather than

buying yardage. Believe me, it’s bad enough paying $5.00 for a fq.

Elaine

elainb@pinc.com

in Victoria, B.C., where we actually have some blue sky and sunshine today!


Date: Sun, 7 Feb 1999 18:41:40 EST

From: JBQUILTOK@aol.com

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: Re: Pan Am Exposition

Message-ID: ec2df5c3.36be24b4@aol.com

Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII

Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit

Willa Barnowski did a lot of research into red work quilts & wrote Historical

Penny Squares that was published by AQS a few years ago. Her research started

in Western New York, where, as you can imagine, quilts made from the Pan Am

Expo are more common. I’ve seen several examples when I’ve been able to get

to quilt shows in that part of the country.

Also, I’ve never needed benefit of a tape recorder to remember my grandmother

telling about her memories of THAT event. They were planning to take the

train into Buffalo from a town about 20 miles away the next day. Then they

heard about McKinley having been shot & all the trains shut down so they

couldn’t go. Gee, I might have had some of the original penny squares if

she’d been able to go. Instead, the only mystery needle work I have from her

is a square with several names written on it & about 1/2 of them have had

embroidery done over them. Can’t place any of the names, so can’t figure out

how old she was when it was done.

Janet


Date: Sun, 7 Feb 1999 19:19:43 -0600

From: “Brian/Jen Schmidt” brian_jen@prodigy.net

To: “QHL” QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: “Civil War” fabrics

Message-ID: <005301be5301$1d684d00$59e89cd1@BRIAN_JEN>

May I inject an historical note about the current fad for “Civil War”

fabrics?

Bottom line? We probably should not be talking about “Civil War”

fabrics, but rather “C.W.-era” cotton prints, pre-1861, and in the

latter years of the 1860s, as production and manufacturing were

haltingly resumed. What do the rest of you think?

As a novice to quilt history, I’ve found this latest thread to be particularly

interesting because my small quilting group is beginning a row-by-row round robin,

and I have requested that only “Civil War” reproduction fabrics be used for my

project. I had been ignorant of the difficulties many women had in obtaining cotton

fabric. Now I have a new appreciation for the reproduction fabric I’ve come to favor

lately.

Also, as a novice to quilt history in general and fabric history in particular, I

consider myself a “layman” on this list. My profession or reputation doesn’t require

me to distinguish between “Civil War” and “Civil War era” labels for this type of

reproduction fabric. Likewise, I don’t usually refer to the reproductions of 1920s,

30’s, or 40s fabrics as “Pre-/Mid-/Post-Depression” repro. fabrics. My quilting

friends understand me when I say “Depression” or “Depression Era” fabrics. So, as

I’ve been explaining what kinds of fabrics I’d like for my round robin project, I’ve

been referring to them as “Civil War” fabrics. My small group gets the idea of the

colors, texture, and tone of fabric I want; and they do understand that all that kind

of fabric wasn’t necessarily produced during the Civil War. The term “Civil War”,

being such a major event in U.S. history, has come to represent more years in many

quilters’ minds than the four years the actual war lasted.

My point is (and I do have one) that the finer distinctions (such as “pre-1861”,

“latter 1860s” or even a decade before or after) aren’t necessary for me to describe

that kind of fabric. But, as I mentioned before, it could be important to do so for

professional textile historians whose reputations are based on the finer

distinctions. And it does, indeed, make for an interesting history lesson. Thanks.

Jennifer


Date: Sun, 7 Feb 1999 21:37:22 EST

From: SadieRose@aol.com

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: Re: QHL: “Civil War” fabrics

Message-ID: 3339d276.36be4de2@aol.com

Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII

Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit

Hello,

I have found the discussion on Civil War era fabrics

interesting…following is a post I sent to the Dear Jane e-mail list last

summer, when we had a discussion of what fabrics were “appropriate” to that

time period. Thought it might be of interest to QHL as well. Although my

comments are directed to the Dear Jane quilt (from the book by Brenda

Papadakis – the original quilt was made by Jane Stickle & completed in 1863),

I think most of them are pertinent to any reproduction piece.

<<Date: Thu, 6 Aug 1998 20:29:14 EDT

To: dearjane-list@dearjane.com

Subject: DJ Period Fabrics

Greetings, everyone!!

Have read several posts about fabrics appropriate to the Civil War era,

etc. Textile history is one of the facets of quiltmaking that really

fascinates me! I think we have to keep in mind, that any “sampler” quilt,

such as Jane’s, probably contained fabrics that were manufactured over a

period of years. I am making quilts in 1998, but my fabric stash contains

fabrics I have collected since the early 1970’s. When I make a scrap quilt,

there are going to be fabrics in it from quite a time span. I’m sure that

was true of Jane’s quilt, too. Certainly there are colors & designs that can

give us a clue to the vintage of the fabric, but it is an “educated guess” at

best.

If you read the printed information available on the current repro

collections, it is really interesting. I have a 8 page brochure put out by

RJR Fabrics with info on “The Ann Robinson Collection”. Did you know

that of the 13 patterns in this collection, only 4 are actually taken from the

Ann Robinson quilt? Here is a quote from the brochure “To give more variety

to the collection, additional patterns were recreated from other quilts,

garments and bedcovers from the late 18th century and early 19th century.”

Ann’s quilt was made in “3 months and 26 days” starting on Oct. 1, 1813.

Ann’s quilt, with hundreds of appliqued leaves, is surely made up of fabrics

that were manufactured prior to 1813….but some of them could have been 20 years old, too!

Four more of the patterns in the RJR "Ann Robinson Collection" are taken

from a “nine patch scrap quilt made by Abbey Hall in the early 19th century”.

This quilt must not be quite as photogenic, as it was not selected to be the

“poster child” for this collection….but it contributed an equal number of

fabric motifs. Another one of the fabrics, the “Plume”, was taken from a

handsewn child’s dress from the 1830’s, which is in the Shelburne Museum’s

collection. Two more patterns were taken from a block printed Indian

Palampore!

So, within the "Ann Robinson Collection" you have designs from a wide

variety of sources, and a one hundred year time span!! Good, bad or

indifferent?? If you think you can use fabrics from one (or more) of these

“collections” and be “safe” because they all were from the same quilt,

therefore the same time period… you can’t. Also, as Janet mentioned…they

may do one coloration that is similar to the original…but then there are

other colorways which may be chosen more for their appeal to quilters of

today, than for their historical accuracy.

If you are trying to be "historically accurate" with the colors & designs

you choose for your quilts, it will take a lot of (fun) research…you can’t

rely on the fabric companies to do that for you. I am using some reproduction

prints, as well as other fabrics (woven plaids, for example) that would be

appropriate, but aren’t represented in the current repro collections. My

quilt is just that….MY QUILT. I am using colors and fabrics I want… just

as Jane used colors & fabrics that she liked, that were available to her. I

would say that my quilt will be “inspired by” or “in the style of” Jane

Stickle’s quilt. We each can choose how we want our quilts to look…

just be aware that if you are really trying to use fabric motifs & colors to

make a “Civil War era” quilt, it isn’t quite as easy as just buying from certain

collections.

Another thing to consider, is the color choices WE make...there are

chartreuse fabrics out there today, but you won’t find any of them making

their way into MY quilts 🙂 I’m sure that each quilter, of any generation,

has likes & dislikes in color & pattern…that would affect the appearance of

her quilt. Also, most antique fabrics have undergone some color change, due

to the dyes or mordants used, or the effect of light on the fabric (fading or

color changes can both be caused by light).

So, learn as much as you can....but don't let it spoil the enjoyment you

get out of making YOUR quilt!! If you want to learn more about fabric

history, “Clues in the Calico” by Barbara Brackman is a must. Happy Stitching!! Karan (aka SadieRose) >>

Since I wrote this, Eileen Trestain’s book “Dating Fabrics – A Color Guide

1800-1960″ has been published, and I would definitely include this as a

resource, too.

Karan from sunny Iowa


Date: Mon, 8 Feb 1999 00:38:37 -0500

From: “J. G. Row” Judygrow@blast.net

To: “Quilt History List” QHL@cuenet.com

Following is a bibliography of books that have bearing on oral history. I

have taken it from the booklet ” Oral History for the Local Historical

Society”, third edition, revised, by Willa K. Baum, copyright 1987. ISBN

0-910050-87-2, which is a very good primer for anyone interested in doing

oral histories.

Baum, Willa K – “Transcribing and Editing Oral History.” 1977, 127 pp

Nashville: American Association for State and Local History (172 Second

Avenue North, Suite 102, Nashville, Tenn. 37201. $9.00

Charlton, Thomas L. ” Oral History for Texans.” 1981, 85 pp. Austin: Texas

Historical Commission (P.O. Box 12276, Austin Tx, 78711. $5.75.

Cutting-Baker, Holly, et al. “Family Folklore Interviewing Guide and

Questionaire. 1978, 7 pp. Washington DC. U.S. Govt. Printing Office.

$1.00

Epstein, Ellen Robinson and Rona Mendelsohn. “Record and Remember: Tracing

Your Roots Through Oral History.” 1978, 119 pp. Washington DC. Center for

Oral History, Chevy Chase, MD (7507 Wyndale Road, Chevy Chase, MD. 20815.

$4.25. Especially good for immigrant families.

Ives, Edward D. “The Tape-Recoded Interview: A Manual for Field Workers in

Folklore and Oral History.” 1980, 130 pp. Knoxville: The University of

Tennessee Press (Knoxville Tenn., 37996) $7.00. A full and readable manual

by a leading folklorist, especially strong on recording techniques.

Inclueds samples of form letters, agreements, accession forms.

Shumway, Gary L and William G. Hartlye. “An Oral History Primer.” 1973, 28

pp. Salt Lake City :Primer Publications (PO Box 11894, Salt Lake City, Utah

84147) $2.50. A simple guide on how to get going, especially aimed at doing

one’s own family history.

I don’t know how many of these are still available, or how current the

prices given are. But if you are truly interested in getting started doing

oral histories, the booklet from which this bibliography was taken is an

excellent start. It might be all you need.

Judy in Ringoes, NJ

judygrow@blast.net



Date: Mon, 8 Feb 1999 01:04:42 EST

From: QuiltFixer@aol.com

In a message dated 2/7/99 8:51:24 PM Pacific Standard Time,

sandjloken@worldnet.att.net writes:

<< I’m sure it was just a slip of the ‘tongue’ when you wrote Brooklyn, NY. I

believe McKinley was shot in Buffalo, NY, but it sounds like a great quilt.

Jean in MN who grew up in Brooklyn. >>

Right you are Jean, it must have been the excitement. It is Buffalo, NY

indeed!

Toni B.

QuiltFixer@aol.com



Date: Mon, 08 Feb 1999 08:10:07 -0500

From: Nancy Roberts <robertsn@norwich.net

One source for info on Nancy Cabot designs is Barbara Brackman’s book, The

Encyclopedia of Pieced Patterns (AQS). She includes a reference at the back

of the book giving background information on pattern sources. Nancy Cabot was

the name of a 1930s syndicated column published in the Chicago Tribue. It was

written by Loretta Leitner Rising. I have found the B. Brackman book to be a

valuable resource in researching the first publication of patterns, pattern

names, etc. and recommend it. Nancy


Date: Mon, 08 Feb 1999 12:46:44 -0700

From: Eileen Trestain ejtrestain@earthlink.net

I’d like to throw in a small comment about the price of fabric in the

south during the war. Remember that the value of money fluctuated at

this time. too. Depending on the situation at the time, and who she was

trying to buy from, our “$20 a yard” lady could have been paying a lot

more OR a lot less than we think of as $20.. BY the end of the war, she

could have paid thousands in confederate money, and still not gotten her

fabric, as the paper money was worthless. Unlike today, where

confederate money is probably worth thousands!

I’ve seen the orange and green applique quilt Diane Leone has up for

auction. In fact, I have pictures of it up close and personal. It was

beyond my means when I saw it then, but it is a “one of those that got

away” quilt that never leaves my mind. What is the chance I can catch it

now, do you think? It is definately “me” in many ways.

Xenia, if I am coming to Quilt America, I would definately like to go to

the Boxes Under the Bed seminar. Do you think I could fit it in?

Eileen Trestain


Date: Mon, 8 Feb 1999 15:45:30 EST

From: Baglady111@aol.com

ROCKY MT QUILT MUSEUM

1111 Washington Ave

Golden, CO 80401303-277-0377

email RMQM@woroldnet.att.net

and I would like to add..JUNE 1 THRU AUG 28 is a FEEDSACK

QUILT/FASHIONS/MEMORABILIA exhibit and I will be there to present a lecture

Monday June 14, at 7:oopm..come by and say HI…Jane of THE FEEDSACK CLUB


Date: Mon, 8 Feb 1999 21:13:08 -0000

From: “Jenni Dobson” <jenni@dobson4qu.freeserve.co.uk

Hi, everyone, I’m a new subscriber to this list, introducing myself from the

UK. My name is Jenni Dobson and I heard about the list from an American

quilting friend who lives over here.

I’m writing on the subject of getting to see old quilts because like the

quilter who wrote last week, I recently saw some interesting old quilts too!

I was visiting the Mannin Quilters on the Isle of Man (in that bit of sea

between England, Scotland & Ireland) and because my flight arrived early in

the day, they arranged a visit for me to see quilts in the museum, which

aren’t usually on display. We saw about 10 quilts (about 1/3rd of what they

have) of many different styles, including ones made from woollen fabrics

produced locally, using the local variety of sheeps’ wool. The earliest

quilt was probably from the 1820s. It was fascinating that as the curator

answered our questions about them, I also learned more about what life was

like on the island in the past than I would have otherwise. In most cases,

they knew the family names of the makers and because the island is quite a

small place, lots of background information can still be found.

It’s really sad that most UK museums don’t display their textile collections

(incl. quilts) at least on rotation, though I know the right conditions are

costly to provide. But in many cases, visitors don’t even know such

collections exist and so people don’t even request to see these things. If

only they were documented better and talked about more, more people might

ask to see them and make the keepers realise we are interested. (BTW, the

local group hope to help document these quilts.)

I left feeling like the other contributor – privileged to have seen these

quilts.

Jenni Dobson – from the snowy Midlands of England.

From: Xenia Cord xecord@netusa1.net

I have had a nice email from the director of corporate services at the

Nova Scotia Museum. Someone kindly forwarded my post about their

excellent book, Old Nova Scotian Quilts, and he informs me that they

will shortly reissue the book.
Xenia


Date: Tue, 9 Feb 1999 12:12:22 -0000

From: “Sally Ward” sward@t-ward.demon.co.uk

We have been discussing the relative cost of fabrics, but can anyone tell me

if the high cost of cotton thread is universal? Yesterday I bought a 1000

metre reel of Sylko mercerised cotton which has just had its annual price

rise. The price now is UKP 5.25 which equates to USD 8.40. My retailer

blames it on a ‘cartel’ controlling the price, and couldn’t understand why I

wouldn’t buy some cotton/polyester mix at UKP1.00. Since thread is

something we all need all the time I would be happy to stock up with a US

order if the price is right and if someone can recommend a brand.

Sally


Date: Tue, 9 Feb 1999 08:29:02 -0800

From: Kathy Tavares kmtavare@uci.edu

Can anyone tell me how we could get in touch with someone to have them

speak at our guild on this program? It wouldn’t be this year, as our

calendar is full, but possibly next year.

Also, can someone email me privately and let me know where to send the $15

to for the BB.

Kathy T,

Kathy Tavares

kmtavare@uci.edu

(949)824-6047

(949)824-2261 FAX

University of California, Irvine

Physical Sciences

Purchasing

172 Rowland Hall

Irvine, CA 92697-4675


Date: Tue, 9 Feb 1999 13:38:05 EST


Date: Tue, 09 Feb 1999 17:58:34 -0600

From: Russell-Hill <russhill@ctesc.ne

Sally Ward wrote:

>

We have been discussing the relative cost of fabrics, but can anyone tell me

if the high cost of cotton thread is universal? Yesterday I bought a 1000

metre reel of Sylko mercerised cotton which has just had its annual price

rise. The price now is UKP 5.25 which equates to USD 8.40. My retailer

blames it on a ‘cartel’ controlling the price, and couldn’t understand why I

wouldn’t buy some cotton/polyester mix at UKP1.00. Since thread is

something we all need all the time I would be happy to stock up with a US

order if the price is right and if someone can recommend a brand.

>

Sally

Good afternoon,

Well some of the reason for the price to have gone up is that TX had

such a bad drought last year that the Cotton crop in the Pan handle was

or is almost non existant. The southern part of the state grows cotton

to and what they did have got distroyed in the floods and heavy rain

this fall. I talked with Mr Wilbanks from Hobbs asking him about the

cost of cotton batts mostly the organic ones they have because they get

that cotton from the Pan Handle. Of course it is like anything else

coffee goes up because of a problem in Columbia Sugar goes up because of

this etc. We get use to the higher prices they never come down then

there is a glut of the product and we then see a tiny drop. I know that

prices overseas are way higher then ours but I think we to will see

higher cotton prices also because of the drought. We can only pray for

a good year for the cotton farmers . I never did get an answer on the

cost of batts going up so I am stocking up anyway. I like the 100%

organic because it is the closest to what was in older quilts of the

1800’s I know they carded the cotton but it is think like they were.

Debbie


Date: Tue, 9 Feb 1999 19:48:33 EST


Date: Tue, 9 Feb 1999 21:21:25 EST

From: @aol.com

Donna –

There was an exhibit at Old Sturbridge Village in Massachusetts on New England

quilts from 1750 to the early 1800’s, with a companion book (=Northern

Comfort=). The very early quilts were wholecloth, usually either of fine

wool or plain silk, or occasionally quilted palampores (the early equivalent

of an Indian print bedspread). There are also very old quilts at the

Metropolitan Museum in New York, the Smithsonian, the Los Angeles County

Museum in California, the Wadsworth Atheneum in Hartford, the Winterthur

Museum in Delaware, and the Shelburne Museum in Vermont.

You might also see if you can find a local Revolutionary War re-enactment

group. Rev War re-enactors are fanatics for accuracy, even worse than Civil

War regiments.

Good luck!

Karen Evans

Easthampton, MA


Date: Tue, 09 Feb 1999 20:12:11 -0600

From: Valerie Davis <vpse@globaldialog.com

Dear group,

Of the two films, Dances with Wolves, and Last of the Mohicans, the

more accurate depiction of Native American history would have to be

Dances with Wolves. The 1980’s version of “Mohicans” was taken from the

1930’s film version, which was taken from the James Fennimore Cooper’s

book from the late 19th c. Cooper’s book was a highly romantized

version of what happened to the Mohican’s and is inaccurate. Both the

two films added a romantic interest for Hawkeye which was not part of

the book. I must agree the rifle, costumes, and scenary were depicted

with much authenticity. I’ve read that the producers of the 1980’s film

spent considerable amount of time and effort researching the fighting

scenes and weapons. Oh by the way, Cooper was wrong about the Mohicans

dying out. When they were kicked out of New York they migrated west and

are now happily living in Wisconsin!!! I just

love talking history, Valerie

Date: Tue, 09 Feb 1999 21:16:12 -0600

From: Russell-Hill russhill@ctesc.net

To: @aol.com

You might also see if you can find a local Revolutionary War re-enactment

group. Rev War re-enactors are fanatics for accuracy, even worse than Civil

War regiments.

>

Good luck!

>

Karen Evans

Easthampton, MA

I thought only Civil War units were to the extreme. Its good to know

there is someone out there worse than us.

Debbie


Date: Wed, 10 Feb 1999 07:33:56 +0400

From: Xenia Cord xecord@netusa1.net

If I may, I’d like to caution the list about offering negative opinions

publicly about dealings with quilt vendors. The internet is a powerful

tool, and one bad review can have an instantly devastating effect if we

are not careful. I suppose all of us have favorites from whom we buy

with confidence, and others we might be less likely to deal with, but

unless there has been a clear intent to defraud or mislead, a vendor’s

reputation should not be commented upon negatively. Without a good

reputation a quilt vendor has little to offer.

IMHO as a buyer and as a vendor; my good name is the basis for my

business.

Xenia


Date: Wed, 10 Feb 1999 08:29:53 EST

From: Baglady111@aol.com

and if you are coming to QUILTERS’ HERITAGE CELEBRATION in Lancaster, April;

stop by and visit with us at the 5th Annual Conference of The Feedsack

Club..we’ll be at 521 Greenfield Rd, HOLIDAY INN..right across from the

TOURIST BUREAU..or contact me for the FUN ahead!!! Lectures, demos, silent

auction, feedsack display, SHOW & TELL..so popular we have to hold it two

nites!!! Jane of THE FEEDSACK CLUB


Date: Wed, 10 Feb 1999 08:44:33 -0600

From: Laura Hobby Syler texas_quilt.co@mail.airmail.net

To: “J. G. Row” Judygrow@blast.net, “Quilt History List” QHL@cuenet.com

Judy, I’ve bought lots of “blocks” from Betsy.At least Karen and I did 2

years ago. This last year I think I bought one set….that’s all I can

afford. a set of 3 1850 blocks were upwards of $60-75 this last April in

Paducah.., we’ve already discussed the fact that blocks and tops are

escellating in price now, but do they really need to be Soooooo high?.

Know that RMQ sells most of their quilts, and they are absolutely

fantastic, to the oriental market and used to change the prices at the US

shows, but didn’t have time one year and people still bought them. It’s

the old game of the more $$ you are asked to spend the more valuable it

must be. I know of a quilt dealer that was advised to mark their quilts

up 3X what they purchased them for, eliminate the quilts under $500 and

suddenly their business quadrupled!!

And we think that the car repair guy is the only “honest crook” in town

The only way that we can have an effect is not to buy them…but then for

people like my ‘ole buddy, ‘ole pal Karen who feels it is her purpose in

life to own them all…………

BTW, Karen has been pretty quiet lately here, her knee surgery was more

extensive than they first thought. She’s on crutches for *another

week*…cussing and discussing her stairs to her office and the kids room

(no problem there!)

But that means that I get to once again hang the quilts for the

VQTS Quilt College Mini Conference at the end of the month by myself!! I

knew she’d find a way not to climb that ladder

Laura


Date: Wed, 10 Feb 1999 12:27:17 -0500

From: “J. G. Row” <Judygrow@blast.net

I didn’t hear this, and am quoting from a post to another list. Since the

poster didn’t hear the beginning to know who was reading the essay, do you

know whether or not it was from the new Underground Rairoad book?

From: Terry Grant tgrant@teleport.com

Driving to work this morning I heard an essay read on NPR–“Morning

Edition”

I think. Unfortunately I did not hear the beginning to know who it was, but

it was a woman talking about her grandmother’s treasures, which included a

quilt. She said she asked her why she kept the old thing and her

grandmother

said, “you know the story–this quilt is a family treasure.” It seems the

quilt was made by HER grandmother and contained fabric from the dresses

worn

by her grandmother and her grandmother’s sister on the day the sister was

“sold” away. They tore strips from their dresses and exchanged them, so

each

could make a quilt. Then they swore to find one another someday. After

slavery ended the grandmother carried the quilt with her and searched for

her sister for the rest of her life, but never found her.

This story has stayed with me all day and gives me chills to think of it.

What if there are two families out there with treasured family quilts that

have that same fabric in them? What if those quilts could have brought the

sisters back together? What if they could still bring the families

together?

Wouldn’t that be something?

Judy in Ringoes, NJ

judygrow@blast.net


Date: Wed, 10 Feb 1999 10:00:44 -0800 (PST)

From: Jackie Joy jjoy@med.unr.edu

I heard this yesterday; I thought the lady’s name was Lynn Johnson

(something like that). I have heard her before on NPR. She is an

African-American story teller.

She was speaking about a great-aunt, I believe, who had told stories about

her youth. When I started paying attention, it was when she said a little

girl (maybe her aunt) was disappointed when she went to the water fountain

marked “colored” and the water was plain. And then the little girl had

had “Jim Crow” explained to her. I visualized a little African-American

girl in awe in front of a water fountain that was truly “colored”, a la

Liberace’s dancing waters.

There was nothing about quilts as signals on the UGRR, but only as a part

of family history. The speaker in her thoughtless youth had suggested to

her aunt that she get rid of all the “old stuff” in her home and get new.

Jackie Joy

Reno, Nevada

jjoy@med.unr.edu


Date: Wed, 10 Feb 1999 15:23:57 EST

From: Xroadclown@aol.com

Fabric is a powerful thing. We have dozen’s of quilts that were made by by

grandmother and great grandmother (1864- till 1981) My mother can look at

those quilts and remember my grandmother’s dress’s, great-grandmothers,

aprons, and even recognize some shirt fabric worn by each of their husbands.

It’s wonderful. We’ve begun photographing the specific fabrics she

recognizes, and writing the history on the back. that way the memories will

live on and on!

melanie


Date: Wed, 10 Feb 1999 12:37:44 -0800

From: Marilyn Maddalena <marilyn@crl.com

All of you who are interested in Nova Scotia quilts should look for the

next issue of the NQA magazine, The Quilting Quarterly. An article on some

of these will appear in that issue. It should be available to members in

early to mid March. I do have an affiliation — I’m Publications Chair of

NQA — but since there seems to be so much interest in the subject, thought

I’d let you all know so you could look for it. MM in Sacramento, CA


Date: Wed, 10 Feb 1999 12:44:36 -0800

From: Marilyn Maddalena marilyn@crl.com

California began documenting quilts about 20+ years ago through the

California Heritage Quilt Project. Following their documentation, a book

was published entitled “Ho! for California.” I’m on the Board of

Directors, and CHQP is currently involved in the oral history part of the

Heritage project where we record oral interviews with quilters. We hope to

wrap up this part of the project within a year, with 1000 completed

interviews. For the quilter in Irvine, I’m sure you could get hold of

someone on the CHQP Board who lives in your area who could present a

program on conducting oral interviews to your group. A booklet of

directions and guidelines for conducting oral interviews through the CHQP

is available for $25.00. It was put together by the Project Director. Many

guilds throughout the state have been involved in this project. If you

want more information, e-mail me privately. Marilyn in Sacramento

Date: Wed, 10 Feb 1999 22:13:53 -0600

From: Elizabeth Richards erichard@AFHE.ualberta.ca

TEDDY BEAR A student has asked me to look at a teddy bear and give

her an informal appraisal for a museum class she is taking. Since this

isn’t something formal I agreed to help. The item is a contemporary

teddy bear made f rom(you guessed it!) a Victorian silk and velvet log

cabin quilt top. The top had been in this student’s family (American,

eastern) and someone had cut it up to make something with it. The

something was never made so the family sent the peices to a friend who

made eight teddy bears from the quilt top pieces. I don’t agree with

the practice – but I didn’t do it -I just want some help with a range of

suggested prices if one were going to buy such a teddy bear on to-day’s

market. The fabrics are circa 1880 to 1990 – which fits in with the

ages of the quilt makers and the fact that they have two other quilts

(intact) made by the same women. You can e=mail me privately if you

want.

TRAVELLING TO GEORGIA My partner won a trip anywhere that Canadian

Airlines or it’s partners fly so we are going to the northeast corner of

Florida (can’t remember the city) and will drive up the Georgia coast to

Savannah at the end of April. I would like suggestions as to what we

might like to see (quilt related or otherwise), where we might stay

(remembering an American dollar costs us $1.40 Canadian and we prefer

small hotels, inexpensive motels or b & b) and anything else you think

we should know for travelling at that time. If there is a quilt group

in the area that might like an informal talk on conservation I would be

happy to meet with them – perhaps in exchange for a night’s stay. You

can e-mail me privately – as I would welcome suggestions.

Dr. Elizabeth Richards

Professor, Department of Human Ecology

University of Alberta

Edmonton, Alberta

Canada

T6G 2N1

Phone: 403 – 492-2475 Fax: 403-492-4821


Date: Wed, 10 Feb 1999 21:32:14 -0600

From: “Brian/Jen Schmidt” brian_jen@prodigy.net

To: “QHL” QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: Uncoverings

Message-ID: <009d01be556f$2046e340$6de89cd1@BRIAN_JEN>

I’ve seen on this list references made to back issues of American Quilt Study Group’s

publication “Uncoverings”. However, I’ve not seen how one can obtain these back

issues, or even the current one. Could someone let me know how to find issues of

“Uncoverings”? Thanks.

Jennifer

brian_jen@prodigy.net


Date: Wed, 10 Feb 1999 20:22:58 -0800

From: “Catherine Kypta” vger@cwnet.com

Just my experience with Betsey. Yes, she has some great things but I think

the pricing is way out there. She has been here in California at the

Pacific Show a couple of times and I thought most everything was way too

pricey, but I did buy some sunflower blocks (mariner’s compass) from her

about 4 years ago through the mail and she went back and searched the rest

of them out so I would have a set of 20, they are wonderful, 1850’s fabric

and all the points on the furthest row are edged witha wonderful decorative

embroidery stitch. Good resource for vintage fabric and she has given me a

break on some things which were less than perfect condition. I think she’s

reliable! Just my own opinion!

Catherine in Sacramento


Date: Thu, 11 Feb 1999 07:57:34 +0400

From: Xenia Cord xecord@netusa1.net

To: Brian/Jen Schmidt brian_jen@prodigy.net

CC: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: Uncoverings

Message-ID: 36C2552C.48D2@netusa1.net

Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii

Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

To Jennifer and anyone else who wants to buy back issues of Uncoverings,

write: AQSG, 25th & Holdrege East Campus Loop, P.O. Box 4737, Lincoln,

NE 68504-0737.

Email AQSG@juno.com.

Why not join while you are at it? It’s a great group!

Xenia


Date: Thu, 11 Feb 1999 09:54:09 EST

From: JQuilt@aol.com

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: test

Message-ID: daf75285.36c2ef11@aol.com

Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII

Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit

test


Date: Thu, 11 Feb 99 11:00:30 -0500

From: Woodford woodford@ix.netcom.com

To: “QHL Post” QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: Quilted jackets

Message-Id: 199902111553.JAA25917@dfw-ix3.ix.netcom.com

Content-Type: text/plain; charset=”US-ASCII”

Hello everyone,

I need help again.

There is a very nice dress shop in our small town, and the owner is

looking for a source of quilted jackets, either made with vintage

fabrics, or with new. I made the mistake of thinking that I could just

look up the vendors in the Houston International Quilt Festival

registration and found I had no idea who actually sold finished quilt

jackets, if anyone.

So, please let me know privately of any maker that sells these to retail

businesses. She would be delighted to have a source.

Thanks, Barbara Woodford

Historic American Quilts

woodford@ix.netcom.com

Woodford

woodford@ix.netcom.com


Date: Thu, 11 Feb 1999 08:27:33 -0800 (PST)

From: Jackie Joy jjoy@med.unr.edu

Last night at guild meeting, we were told that the NQA will be holding

their year 2000 show in Reno and that the three local guilds will be asked

to participate in the work.

What can anyone tell me about this show? What is your experience with

it, good, bad or ugly? Is this the one that the entry flap was about last

year?

Let me know what you know, but please use my dh’s address when you reply

lljoy@govmail.state.nv.us

as I am leaving this job and computer today and only pray that I will have

access to my e-mail at the new job. I would miss everyone too much if I

didn’t.

Jackie Joy

Reno, Nevada


Date: Thu, 11 Feb 1999 18:15:11 -0500

From: “Cathy Hooley” goosetracks@albany.net

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: NPR Story

Message-ID: <01be5614$5ff9e5a0$3acb48ce@default>

Content-Type: text/plain;

    charset="iso-8859-1"

Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

You probably already know this, but the story you heard on NPR can be found

at the following site – its the last one listed – under the heading

Storytelling

http://www.npr.org/programs/morning/archives/1999/990209.me.html

Cathy Hooley

Goose Tracks Quilts

Date: Fri, 12 Feb 1999 08:51:21 -0500

From: Nancy Roberts robertsn@norwich.net

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: QHL-vintage quilt prices

Message-ID: 36C431D9.3146@norwich.net

Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii

Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

A collector loaned me a copy of one of his special interest magazines that

had a feature about the prices of antique quilts at auction. The gist was

that vintage quilts are fetching lower prices today than they were a few

years ago. The author offered the decline of old quilts as “trendy” decorator

items as one possible reason. That made me try to recall if I’ve seen as many

quilts in room shots for magazines like Country Living and Country Home

lately. I’m not sure. He also cited awareness of the value of family quilts

and the availability of them on the market.I’m curious if those who attend

auctions have noticed if quilts tend to bring less today? I’m not even sure

how one would compare this.

At our recent guild meeting a woman showed a lovely album quilt complete with

signatures purchased at auction in western NY for $1100. It was in good

condition (some soiling) and heavily quilted. The signatures were

authenticated as those of church women in a small village in central NY. So a

representative from the village historical society attended the auction and

was the successful bidder, thus bringing the quilt “home.” It’s thought that

the quilt was made for a pastor at the time he left the community for another

assignment. I love to see treasures like these. I’ll be interested in any

comments about the value of antique quilts. Nancy

P.S. I can’t find the collectible magazine right now to tell you the title

and author, but will try if anyone is interested.


Date: Fri, 12 Feb 1999 10:32:49 EST

From: QuiltFixer@aol.com

To: robertsn@norwich.net, QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: Re: QHL: QHL-vintage quilt prices

Message-ID: 3ca5c82b.36c449a1@aol.com

Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII

Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit

There is definitely an upward trend in prices of vintage Redwork Embroidered

Quilts. Also, when I attended the International Show in Santa Clara, CA, I

thought the prices were higher than the previous year on all types of vintage

quilts. Whether people are paying those prices may be another matter, but

since it is so expensive to be a vendor at these shows, something must be

selling.

Toni Baumgard

QuiltFixer@aol.com


Date: Fri, 12 Feb 1999 12:08:49 -0500

From: “Peggy O’Connor” mnoc@brinet.com

To: “Nancy Roberts” robertsn@norwich.net, QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: Re: QHL-vintage quilt prices

Message-ID: <001301be56aa$79d9d2a0$981a64cf@peggynew>

Content-Type: text/plain;

    charset="iso-8859-1"

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I’d like to know the magazine that discussed antique quilt prices. Are

there other (easily accessible) sources for quilt prices? I often wonder

when I see quilts whether the price asked for is reasonable for what the

quilt is, so I’d like to know of some actual sales prices for comparison –

the best I can do is compare dealers’ asking prices. How often do quilt

dealers sell at the asking price versus discount? Do prices for the same

type quilt vary much from region to region, and what regions are high-priced

versus low-priced?

Peggy, enjoying balmy NC before the winter chill arrives later today

—–Original Message—–

From: Nancy Roberts robertsn@norwich.net

To: QHL@cuenet.com QHL@cuenet.com

Date: Friday, February 12, 1999 8:51 AM

Subject: QHL: QHL-vintage quilt prices

A collector loaned me a copy of one of his special interest magazines that

had a feature about the prices of antique quilts at auction. The gist was

that vintage quilts are fetching lower prices today than they were a few

years ago. The author offered the decline of old quilts as “trendy”

decorator

items as one possible reason. That made me try to recall if I’ve seen as

many

quilts in room shots for magazines like Country Living and Country Home

lately. I’m not sure. He also cited awareness of the value of family quilts

and the availability of them on the market.I’m curious if those who attend

auctions have noticed if quilts tend to bring less today? I’m not even sure

how one would compare this.

>

At our recent guild meeting a woman showed a lovely album quilt complete

with

signatures purchased at auction in western NY for $1100. It was in good

condition (some soiling) and heavily quilted. The signatures were

authenticated as those of church women in a small village in central NY. So

a

representative from the village historical society attended the auction and

was the successful bidder, thus bringing the quilt “home.” It’s thought

that

the quilt was made for a pastor at the time he left the community for

another

assignment. I love to see treasures like these. I’ll be interested in any

comments about the value of antique quilts. Nancy

>

P.S. I can’t find the collectible magazine right now to tell you the title

and author, but will try if anyone is interested.

>


Date: Fri, 12 Feb 1999 11:29:49 -0600 (CST)

From: magee@AXP.WINNEFOX.ORG

To: “Peggy O’Connor” mnoc@brinet.com

Cc: Nancy Roberts robertsn@norwich.net, QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: Re: QHL: Re: QHL-vintage quilt prices

Message-id: Pine.PMDF.3.91.990212112339.601835A-100000@AXP.WINNEFOX.ORG

Content-type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII

Content-transfer-encoding: 7BIT

I’m interested in info on quilt prices as well. I certainly see that the

prices here in Wisconsin vary drastically and are very often not

connected to the item as far as I can see. Most of the dealers that i see

don’t know much about textiles and only have a quilt or two. The prices

seem to be lower than other places I’ve been, but it is much harder to get 19th century quilts

here. If there is a resource for the upper midwest I’d love to know it.

Laurie in cold(30) and windy Oshkosh(it was 62 yesterday!)


Laurie Magee | Email: Magee@winnefox.org

Oshkosh Public Library | Phone: (920)236-5207

Oshkosh, WI 54901-4985 | Fax: (920)236-5228



Date: Fri, 12 Feb 1999 13:16:27 +0400

From: Xenia Cord xecord@netusa1.net

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: Pricing antique quilts

Message-ID: 36C3F161.2389@netusa1.net

Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii

Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

I think we cannot expect to see standard pricing in antique quilts, for

a lot of reasons. One is that each quilt is unique (we know that,

right?) and deserves its own price. These are not like the imports,

“$39.95, any size” at your local Walmart. Second, the manner in which

the dealer acquires the quilt may have some effect on the price –

consigned? bought at auction? bought from another dealer? bought from

the family? The expenses incurred by the dealer include not only the

price of the item, but time and travel, vendor space at a show or mall

space in a shop, taxes and licenses, and a host of other costs. (Here

in Indiana we pay inventory tax on every item in inventory on March 1,

every year).

In different parts of the country, the cost of doing business is

different. City locations are costlier than rural ones; major antique

shows and quilt shows are much more expensive than guild shows.

Knowledgeable dealers put the price within reach of their customers,

given the cost factors above, and a reasonable profit. After all, we

are in business to make money, no matter how fond we are of the stuff we

sell! Knowledgeable dealers also have some background in the

merchandise they sell, and are willing to discuss quilt style,

condition, age, rarity, and other technical aspects with the buyer.

IMHO, if you as a buyer are not well grounded in this background as

well, then you should shop where you have confidence in the dealer.

A final variable – the comparative terms we use when discussing price:

higher, lower, value, reasonable, less, more. These terms mean

different things to different people. Nancy’s post earlier cited a

church signature quilt that sold for $1100. Is that a reasonable

price? Some may think so and some may not. Sometimes reasonable is

determined by what’s in the checkbook!

Xenia


Date: Fri, 12 Feb 1999 14:42:08 EST

From: Xroadclown@aol.com

To: mnoc@brinet.com, robertsn@norwich.net, QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: Re: QHL: Re: QHL-vintage quilt prices

Message-ID: c2e083dc.36c48410@aol.com

Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII

Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit

I guess it makes a difference if you really like the quilt or love it what one

would consider expensive. It’s like good chocolate. some of us will pay a

lot for the best, other’s like hershey!

melanie

(any chocolate will do)



Date: Sat, 13 Feb 1999 07:58:47 +1100

From: nomad1 nomad1@ibm.net

Dear All,

Some time ago I came across a book showing Antique Tumbling Block quilts

or baby Blocks as some call them. For the world of me I just cannot

remember the name. If any of you have any books on this subject, could

you please advise the title, author etc so that I can track them down.

Many thanks in anticipation,

Hiranya from Oz :>


Date: Sat, 13 Feb 1999 07:21:00 -0500

From: Alan Kelchner <quiltfix@mail.jax.bellsouth.net

Xenia had some very good points. The only thing I want to add is this: you cannot compare auction

prices to retail prices, hoping to determinecorrect retail. Auction prices are based at 1/2

retail (no one wants to pay retail at auction – but then again, I never want to pay retail – I’m

cheap!). But when the auctioneer is deciding what his take of the auction item is, he uses 50% and hopes for much better. Sometimes he gets retail (Roseville pottery seems to get retail prices

here). Sometimes he gets what he thought he would. And sometimes he gets a rotten price (I’ve had

this happen to me when consigning – not fun).

At an auction, it depends on who is in the audience, what they are interested in, and how deep are

their pockets. Sometimes if they’ve got disposable $$ (usually a private person, not a dealer),

they’ll pay more. I once fought a bidding war and won, but paid 2-3 times what I expected for the

quilt. At this same auction house, I got a more valuable quilt for half what I expected because no

one wanted a brown quilt. Then there was the 1870’s applique sampler top (applique and piecing),

kind of dark and not something an average dealer would want, but I knew what it was….. Any how,

when it came up, I bid it way up and lost because this couple (dealers) that I hadn’t seen before

also knew what it was.

The best fun, tho’ is a collectors war. If they have some extra $$, the bidding can go on for ever

(but they’re only fun when they’re btween to OTHER people!).

If you want to learn pricing, go out and look at every quilt in your area and learn the pricing.

It’ll vary, but you need to learn the quilt pricing to be able to determine if the price is fair

on the quilt you want. Once you’re comfortable with that, you’l start muttering that “that’s a

fair price” and have you shopping companion look at you in complete horror because the tag is over

$1000 “for that old blanket”!

Alan

who’s gramma worked at the Hershey factory and thinks you haven’t lived until you drive through

Hershey (the town) on a warm spring day with the car windows down so you can inhale the perfume

wafting from the factory while you gaze at the street lamps molded to look like wrapped and

unwrapped kisses … and it’s not far from Lancaster where there’s a quilt show in the spring….

Ghirardelli’s? Bah! Gimme a good ol’ Hershey bar anyday.


Date: Sat, 13 Feb 99 11:30:49 -0500

From: Woodford <woodford@ix.netcom.com

The very depressing article for vintage quilt dealers was the Rinker

Report in Warman’s Today’s Collector, March, 1999, pp. 32-36 . He listed

many quilts and their prices as sold at several auctions, one of them the

Margaret Cavigga auction, which I attended.

I don’t agree with him on many statements, but overall have to agree that

the market is pretty soft!

Barbara Woodford

woodford@ix.netcom.com

Date: Sat, 13 Feb 1999 22:42:21 -0500

From: Anthony <ajones2@tampabay.rr.com

I find that there are distinct groups at auctions. There are the people who are buying for resale, dealers, investors, etc.. They are limited to the half of retail rule. Then you have people buying for themselves or others. We can usually bid well retail or even above, since the item is for personal use and even retail is a good price to us. I collect Fiestaware and have bid well above “book value” for items for my collection. Typically we do auctions because we want unusual items that we can’t find retail. Of course, a good price is often a fun bonus. Of course, the internet is mixing it up even more. I think eBay prices are mostly retail; at the very most, retail on sale. Around here in West Florida, procelain and glass goes for outrageous prices at auctions (Royal Doulton, Limoges, Heisey, Fostoria, etc). That’s because there are a lot of collectors around here who haunt the auctions buying for their own collections.

So, when you are determining if auctions prices accurately reflect the market, you need to have a sense of who is bidding.. Once 99% of people at auctions were resellers and we all went to their shops to buy retail. Now you find a lot more people who go to the auctions to buy for themselves.


Date: Sat, 13 Feb 1999 22:32:07 EST

From: WileneSmth@aol.com

I think those awful import quilts from the orient are primarily responsible for the prices of American vintage quilts sagging so bad. I don’t buy and sell old quilts like I used to, but several of my antique dealer friends do and they say they only sell less than six a year now, if that many, and all of them blame the import quilts. An alarming number of “our” old American quilts are being shipped overseas, too, in both directions. Since I live and work in Wichita, KS, I’m ashamed to admit that I have to share breathing space with that “other” quilt dealer, who, I have to add, was “at it again” in last Sunday’s paper — “BUYING OLD QUILTS!” among other things. A couple of years ago, I met a lady who had a friend whose son worked nights for that dealer and his primary job was packing boxes and boxes of quilts for shipment overseas. She was fascinated. I was horrified. Again, just my own thoughts, observations, and personal experiences. –Wilene


Date: Sun, 14 Feb 1999 08:40:06 -0500

From: Nancy Roberts <robertsn@norwich.net

Thanks to Barbara Woodford for posting the Warman’s Today’s Collector magazine reference for the article on vintage quilt prices. Several of you replied asking for the source and, although I’ve been hunting diligently, I have yet to find the magazine. Now I can stop looking-it’s sure to turn up that way. I’ve learned a lot from the comments and observations you’ve all shared. Nancy


Date: Sun, 14 Feb 1999 09:25:47 -0500

From: “Daniel & Diana Dillman” <deedillman@mail.wideopen.net

I agree with everything Alan said. I attend the same auction house frequently and sometimes you deflate when you see certain people/dealers walk in because you know there’s no way you’ll win the bidding war. There are times, though, when you really luck out (like the time I walked out with three great quilts) and that makes up for the disappoinments. I’ve learned not to be too serious about it all.

Dee


Date: Sun, 14 Feb 1999 09:02:44 -0600

From: Laura Hobby Syler <texas_quilt.co@mail.airmail.net

VQTS will have our first Quilt College of 1999 February 26 & 27 on the campus of the University of Texas at Dallas…..Friday evening and all day Saturday.

Elizabeth Kruella, author of several books on the history of lace will be doing a lecture on hand and machine made antique laces on Friday evening. Saturday we will continue our ongoing fabric dating studies, a session on cotton quilt restoration ( last time we got stuck on silks, velvets and crazies) and we will have a segment on African American quilts. If you are in the area but unable to attend Session I of the 1999 Term of VQTS Quilt College, the African-American made quilts from the Fuquay family in Dallas will be on display in the McDermott Library adjacent to the Womens Center ( who graciously hosts our activities) The story behind the collection is quite interesting. The exhibit will be up after the 15th of Feb.

Mini-conference fee is $40 for members $65 for guests. Deadline for registration for Session I is officially Tues ( I did extend it due to the holiday on Monday) but if you really want to come, or want more information about future VQTS Quilt Colleges (we will have them in May, August and November) give me a call at 972-783-4149.or email vqts1@airmail.net


Date: Sun, 14 Feb 1999 10:10:06 EST

From: Tmauvlus@aol.com

I want to add one more thought to the discussion about quilt prices,

especially those in antique malls/shops.

It has been my personal experince that some (most) antique shop owners/dealers

are not completely knowledgeable about textiles. They may be experts in

mission furniture, or vintage jewelry, or depression glass – or all of the

above, but most are not as well versed in quilts.

For instance, there is an antique mall that I used to visit frequently to

check out quilt values – one dealer prices ALL quilts at $350.00. If it is

ready for the dog-bed, it is $350. If it is a red and green to-die-for mid

19th C., it is $350. See where I am going with this?

Yet another dealer in the area stopped taking quilts totally. I asked him

why there were no more quilts there – he said he could not tell a Chinese

import from a priceless heirloom quality quilt, so in order to prevent selling

something without accurate information, he just doesn’t sell quilts at all.

Please don’t misunderstand me here, I am not saying that you can’t go out into

the marketplace and find accurate values; I am just saying to take it all with

a grain of salt.

One last story to illustrate my point. A friend was driving thru town at a

slow enough speed to spy a quilt inside a shop. She stopped, went inside, and

found to her dismay it was a polyester double knit horror. Just underneath

that quilt, however, was a C.1860 Princess Feather with wide chintz borders of

hanging grapes and vines. Mouth-watering – and actual replacement value would

be sky-high. She purchased the P.F. for twenty bucks, all the while the

gentleman was insisting that she was buying the “wrong” quilt – he thought the

double knit was much finer.

Caveat Emptor. Teddy Pruett in FLorida


Date: Sun, 14 Feb 1999 12:41:31 EST

From: Jilly31@aol.com

Hello to everyone. I have been reading this list for a while some time

without comment. I must admit I have learned a lot from all the postings and

find everyone’s comments quite interesting. I enjoy collecting old and

contemporary quilts. Although I only own six quilts right now I am always

looking for more. I recently attended a local auction and wanting to bid on a

dated 1848 coverlet. I didn’t get it and really didn’t even get to bid

because the price soared quickly and was out of my reach (or so I thought at

the time…I could just kick myself for letting it get away!). However, since

then I have discovered that the price it went for is actually cheap! Oh well,

I will know better next time. I just bought a quilt at the local antique mall

and couldn’t figure out why it was so cheap. I thought it may be a fraud but I

still am not sure. I am just now beginning to collect quilts (and I love

them!) but still don’t know much about them. I have one that I cannot

identify the pattern. It looks like an askewed star but a little different.

I suppose there are some differences in patterns made in different parts of

the country. It is all hand stitched but not dated and heavily quilted.

Pinks and calicos dominate the colors. If anyone can tell me how to make a

better identification of this quilt it would be appreciated. I also have a

Rose of Sharon quilt that I boutght at an auction reasonably priced. Around

here quilts at auctions can go anywhere from $50 to $500. I have yet to see

one go for more than that. So you can see that coverlet was a steal! Sorry

to ramble on….but it is so much fun talking about my quilts.

Jill from Centerville, Indiana

Home of the Historic Centerville Quilt Show (June 1999)


Date: Sun, 14 Feb 1999 11:01:04 -0800 (PST)

From: Pamela Robersson <quiltcollector@yahoo.com

I have been following the postings about quilt auctions/pricing for

several days now. I agree 110% with Xenia’s comment. It is not a

standardized market. If someone really wants a quilt…and has $$

they can outpay the guy who wants it but doesn’t have the money. Same

thing in real estate, in every market. Some times it is a sellers

market, some times a buyers.

At auctions – it depends upon who’s there, and the number of bidders.

I have bought wonderful quilts for next to nothing because only a

handful of bidders venture out to an auction on a stormy day – there

is no competition.

The best advice is to know your product and what you are willing to

pay. I have seen dealers mark up quilts an extra 50% for shows like

Paducah, then take those tags off when they get back to town and

reality.

I know another dealer who is HAPPY to make $25 off a quilt – after all

she says, all she does is buy it and put it on her shelf – if she has

to restore or clean it, then she adds on $50 for her time and trouble.

There is no way to validate a price – except what a willing and

informed buyer will pay at an auction, to a dealer, or the gal down

the road.

Pam


Date: Sun, 14 Feb 1999 14:52:24 EST

From: AZquilter9@aol.com

Thank you, Alan, for the wonderful advice. As someone new to the collecting

end of quilts, your information was very helpful. Fortunately, when I’ve been

out looking, I have had a knowledgeable friend with me who tells me whether

the price is fair and advises me what to offer. Maybe one of these days I’ll

be able to buy solo thanks to you and Xenia and others on this list willing to

share information.

Lois

<< If you want to learn pricing, go out and look at every quilt in your area

and learn the pricing.

It’ll vary, but you need to learn the quilt pricing to be able to determine

if the price is fair on the quilt you want. Once you’re comfortable with that, you’l start muttering that “that’s a fair price” and have you shopping companion look at you in complete horror because the tag is over $1000 “for that old blanket”!


Date: Mon, 15 Feb 1999 00:34:12 EST

From: WileneSmth@aol.com

A few more thoughts and personal experiences — I began buying and selling old

quilts in 1978 and continued until the mid-to-late-1980s, but continue now to

make the rounds of shops, malls, and flea markets for other quilt-related

items, especially old published paper and old quilt blocks for my research.

Of course, the old quilts still catch my attention, too, and always will.

Throughout the last 20+ years, I’ve often observed that general antiques

dealers, especially the newer ones, tend to overprice quilts without knowing

anything more about them than the fact that “it’s a quilt,” and often don’t

know the difference between a hand-quilted quilt, a machine-quilted quilt, or

a tied comfort, not to mention how old (or new) it might be. The general idea

seems to be that since it’s a quilt, then it must be valuable. How many

auction goers out there have observed much the same thing among the

auctioneers? Especially the farm auctioneers? I rather enjoy watching them

stick their foot in their mouth, but keep silent because the bidding will

usually tell the tale.

On the reverse side of that coin, not all long time dealers in vintage

textiles, including quilts, always know how to date quilts. One long time

dealer that I’ve known for a long time doesn’t have the slightest idea how to

distinguish an early 1800s quilt from a mid-1800s from a late-1800s, and just

figures they’re all around 1900 somewhere. What’s even worse, she washes many

of them in her washer and dryer at home because her younger customers like

them “puffy.” Actually, I think it’s probably the dealer herself that likes

them that way, not to mention wanting them clean, too.

As to the idea of antique dealers paying “wholesale” for a doubling of the

price to “retail” is, in my view, an old wives tale so to speak, especially

for high dollar items such as quilts. Dealers generally pay a price that’s

reasonable enough that they feel they can add to and make a profit to pay the

bills and expenses (not to mention taxes), and hopefully have something left

over for themselves. Of course, this varies from person to person, and place

to place, and greatly depends on the dealer’s location and overhead.

For Sally in the UK — I haven’t the slightest idea just where overseas all

the quilts are going (I’ve often wondered the same thing), but a lot of

American antiques of all descriptions have been going to Japan for about the

last ten years. Even some of the TV network news magazines have done stories

relating to this phenomenon. And not just antiques, but most anything

American. Perhaps Americans will reciprocate in the compliment one day?

–Wilene


Date: Mon, 15 Feb 1999 01:04:56 -0500

From: “J. G. Row” Judygrow@blast.net

To: “Quilt History List” QHL@cuenet.com, WileneSmth@aol.com

Subject: QHL: LCPQ

Message-ID: <004801be58a9$1d0162e0$1ce8c6cf@judy-grow>

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The last issue I have is from just a number of months ago. The new owners,

Firestone Publishing, installed a wife and son (of the publisher) as editor

and art director, and they just didn’t know nothin’ about birthin’ a quilt

mag.

I am filling out a form to try and retrieve the rest of my subscription from

them.

I find it really sad that the editor

who replaced Louise Townsend and is primarily responsible for the

magazine’s

content neither enjoys or appreciates history.

Please remember that the best of today’s quilting usually winds up in the

best of today’s quilt magazines, and these quilts are tomorrow’s history.

Don’t neglect them. I think it is important to know where those historical

examples have taken us.

Judy in Ringoes, NJ

judygrow@blast.net


Date: Mon, 15 Feb 1999 01:41:50 EST

From: WileneSmth@aol.com

To: J. G. Row Judygrow@blast.net

Cc: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: Re: LCPQ & QNM, et al

Message-ID: 16c16aea.36c7c1ae@aol.com

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<< Please remember that the best of today’s quilting usually winds up in the

best of today’s quilt magazines, and these quilts are tomorrow’s history.

Don’t neglect them. I think it is important to know where those historical

examples have taken us. >>

Absolutely. My point exactly. The old ones lead us to the new ones, and

both, together, take us into the future. The old ones tell us where we’ve

been and the new ones tell us where we are. The only thing I worry about with

all the absolutely incredible quilts being created today is if today’s fabrics

will allow them to be around 200 years from now, but, then, we’ll never know,

will we? Sure hope so, though. (I especially enjoy looking at today’s

optical illusion quilts and the realistic picture quilts.) –Wilene


Date: Mon, 15 Feb 1999 08:51:48 -0500

From: Merry May cluesew@jerseycape.com

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: Prices, QNM, etc.

Message-ID: 36C82672.2684@jerseycape.com

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Hi all 🙂 Just wanted to inject a couple of thoughts/comments on the

recent topics. On pricing, I think the cheap imported quilts have hurt

in two ways: first, they’re available at the local Wal-Mart for $29.95,

so the typical consumer will shun the good ones (antique or not) because

of the bargain-basement prices; the second way they’ve hurt, especially

in the antiques market, is by being carried by either disreputable or

unknowledgeable dealers (I’m talking general antiques dealers, not our

wonderful antique quilt experts) who try to pass them off as antiques.

I can not tell you how many times my DH and I have been browsing in an

antiques mall and seen these imported quilts with deceptive tags on

them, trying to pass them off as the real thing… of course, the prices

are upwards of at least $200; often $350 or more. Sometimes the tag

will say, “Hand-stitched Quilt,” but when the average buyer sees this in

an antiques shop, they naturally tend to assume that it’s an oldie.

Again, caveat emptor. You REALLY know it’s a fraud when you see the

hole in the seam at the edge of the quilt where the manufacturer’s

content tag used to be!

On QNM, for those who are unhappy with the new format and such, I would

recommend that you take a few moments to look up either their editorial

address, or their email address and tell them about your complaints.

Don’t assume that they’re monitoring this list, or any other list, and

that they’ll somehow read our minds! Believe me, editors DO read mail;

maybe not as quickly as we’d like them to, but they do read it and take

it into consideration. If they get enough mail about an issue or

concern, then they’ll start making some changes.

And (although I realize this is sort of off-topic, and I beg your

indulgence) as for LCPQ, Part 1 of my Inspector Cluesew’s Case #110

appeared in their LAST issue (came out around last August)… this means

there are people who have cut their fabrics for this mystery quilt, and

now have no idea how to find Part 2. Rob at The Quilt Channel has

kindly agreed to carry the instructions as a series, so it can now be

found at:

http://www.quiltchannel.com/strippy1.htm

Please spread the word to those lost souls out there who have all of

these fabrics cut and don’t know where to find the rest of the

instructions!! Thanks. … and now, back to lurkdom…. 🙂

Take care.

Merry 🙂

Merry May (a.k.a Inspector Cluesew & Jessica Four-Patch)

Schoolhouse Enterprises


Date: Mon, 15 Feb 1999 09:51:44 -0500

From: Jean Ann quiltmag@mindspring.com

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: Hawaiian Quilt History and more

Message-Id:

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I just spent a week in Hawaii, after being invited there to feature Hawiian

Quilts in QUILT magazine for the next year. I was able to photograph

historic quilts at four historic sites. They were the Bishop Museum, Lyman

House Museum, Mission House Museum and Queen Emma’s Summer Palace.

I found the flag quilts especially interesting. They were made after the

USA took over the Hawaiian Islands because the women were determined that

they would sleep under the Hawaiian flag even though the flages were banned

from being flown. Each of these flags has the coat of arms or crowns

signifying the Hawaiian royal family which was abolished by the USA,

although descendants of the family still live in Hawaii and still use their

titles as do the other residents there.

The Lyman House Museum is on the big island and the other three museums are

on Oahu in Honolulu. The Lyman House Museum has a splendid small exhibit of

a half dozen full size antique Hawaiian quilts. There are also several

miniature quilts in mini room vignettes. The mini quilter were made by

Elizabeth Akana and the historical info for the exhibit was written by her.

This exhibit is available to travel to other museums and we hope to get the

word out about this in the magazine.

Naturally all of the museums hope to attract tourists to their museums to

see their quilts and their other interesting exhibits that show Hawaiian

life from the time the first missionaries came.

I didnt go to the beach even one time. I spent the time when I was not at

the museums visiting quilters on the islands and seeing the magnificent

quilts they make. I have never had a particular interest in making a

Hawaiian quilt but now I cant wait to do so.

In the past year QUILT has been invited to more and more museums to

photograph quilts in their collections. In the summer issue we will feature

a Baltimore Album quilt that was recently acquired by the DAR Museum in

Washington DC that has twenty-five blocks each and every one of them signed

by Mary Simon. It is believed to be the only quilt that has every block

made by Mary Simon. A writer from DC interviewd Nancy Tuckman about the

quilt and its acquisition.

I came prepared to pay a fee to each of the museums for the photography of

their quilts. This was required by each of the museums to cover the cost of

the personnel that had to be in attendance at the photography sessions. It

is a perfectly understandable cost involved with photographing historic

quilts in museum settings as museums today are struggling to get funding to

cover the costs of operating. Fortunately my publisher allows a budget for

these expenses so I can work with the museums and get the pictures and

stories. Also, in Hawaii I would probably not have gotten entre into the

museums without the State of Hawaii sponsoring my trip and supporting our

writing the stories. He also paid the expense of the photographter to be in

Hawaii and the professional day rates for the photography.

Quilters who have small museums in their area with quilt collections can do

advance work with the museum administration to see if they would be willing

to have their collection photographed and featured in a quilt magazine with

a story about the museum. It takes a bit of advance planning to get such a

story to a magazine. If your museum is willing then the next step is to

contact a magazine and see if they are interested. Editors would need to

know what fee they need to pay the museum and what limitations there would

be on actually taking the pictures. Can quilts be moved to be photographed

on a bed, for instance. Can glass cases be opened so a picture can be

taken? All of these things need to work together for historic quilts to be

photographed and featured in your favorite magazine.

That’s my two cents worth in seeing more historic quilts in quilt

magazines. It is a lot of work, and expense, but I think it is well worth

it. But then, I live in a hundred year old house that is a half mile from a

Civil War national battlefield and everything in this town is historic and

I love it! I wouldnt live anywhere else.

Jean Ann Eitel, Editor

QUILT magazine site: http://www.quiltmag.com – IRC chat site:

http://www.quilttalk.com

Personal web site: http://www.mindspring.com/~quiltmag/jeanann/jaeindex.html


Date: Mon, 15 Feb 1999 09:48:51 EST

From: CABHoney@aol.com

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: underground railroad

Message-ID: 9733c87c.36c833d3@aol.com

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I know this has been discussed a lot, but one more time, what is the name of

the author and the new book about underground railroad quilts? My coworker is

African American and her church is doing a presentation about African American

History Month and would like the name of the book. The discussion among the

ladies in her church was exactly as I read on this list: different quilt

patterns meant different things, and even the way a quilt was hanging outside

meant something different. Thank you for the info once again and I promise to

pay more attention.

Cindy Honeycutt


Date: Mon, 15 Feb 1999 11:22:29 EST

From: Baglady111@aol.com

To: QHL@cuenet.com, ttsw@ttsw.com

Subject: QHL: ELDERHOSTEL

Message-ID: 6b716518.36c849c5@aol.com

Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII

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Can anyone offer the email address or web site for the ELDERHOSTEL? please

email privately..thanx…Jane


Date: Mon, 15 Feb 1999 22:18:38 +0300

From: “John Ordway” ordway@glas.apc.org

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: Questions; this and that

Message-ID: <000001be5917$fe667540$0100a8c0@ordway.glas.apc.org>

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Hi all — I have a mixed posting here.

Qs:

1) 150th statehood CA quilt: would someone see if they can find out the

schedule for June for me (i.e. what part of CA it will be in)? Thanks.

2) Handpiecing w/silk: I am thinking about vacation hand projects, and am

thinking about a grandmother’s flower garden (no brainer).

I can get silk inexpensively here, but should I back it first with some

light interfacing? At this point I don’t have a lot of free time, so I’d

like to order those nice heavy English paper piecing templates — there used

to be a mail order company that I think was called Paper Pieces … anybody

have an address? Also, working with silk — should I use silk thread for

basting and whip stitching?

3) If I don’t do the silk, I’ll do baby blocks. Forgive me for being so

elementary, but I don’t think I need to paper piece those … can’t I just

put them together as if I were doing lily petals or something?

XENIA: There was an article in the Moscow Times last week — I’ll find it

for you and send it to you if you like (send me an address) — Feb. 6 was

St. Kcensia’s name day. She was a combination of a helper of the poor, a

healer, and … a mystic (a nice way of saying the locals thought she was a

little touched in the head )

Quilting in Russia: I was at the Russian museum in St. Petersburg this

weekend. In the “Folk Art” wing, I saw a very colorful pieced pineapple

quilt. The pineapple quilt was made in 1981, was called “patchwork quilt”

and was from the Archangelsk region (far north). You can tell it was

machine quilted. There was a booklet to buy, for all of $1.50 or so, that

had some other pictures of equally colorful scrap quilts – log cabin, le

Moyne star, folded patchwork star coasters, and fabric braided rugs. The

only “old” piece was a picture of a medallion style quilt from the end of

the 19th century, from the Kazanskaya province full of one patch squares,

flying geese, and diamonds in a square. The fabrics are fascinating: the

edge larger triangles are made of the famous red “cambric” (copper dye plate

fabrics) that are no longer made in Russia. The one patch squares look as if

they were right in the same age group of US fabrics at that time– it’s

almost as if I am recognizing some of the Smithsonian reproductions here! I

wonder where all the fabric came from.

A first: a patchwork quilt book (w/instructions) published in Russian by a

Russian woman, Irina Muchanova, 1998. All of the quilts are from Russian

fabrics and she does a good job of making them work. Russian fabrics are

similar to our 60s and 70s calicos. There are a few original pieces, but

most seem to be along the Jinny Beyer line of patterns using diamonds and

color placement — I recognize them. Not that they look like Jinny Beyer

quilts — the fabrics are completely different! There are no pattern

templates, but illustsrations for many blocks.I think the book cost under 2

dollars!

That’s alll,

Maryjo in Moscow


Date: Mon, 15 Feb 1999 14:22:52 -0500

From: “John and Cinda Cawley” cawley@epix.net

To: “QHL” QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: Poppy quilt top, etc.

Message-ID: <01be5918$9503e460$3e41e0c7@mailhost.epix.net.epix.net>

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I was in Easton, MD on the Eastern Shore last week and found a completed =

top of a Poppy quilt kit. The top is 82×98″. =20

The flowers are in two shades of red, the leaves and stems in two shades =

of green. The only identification on it is the number 7-2477 stamped on =

the top and bottom. The workmanship is beautiful, applique and =

embroidery. It has a couple of “liver spots,” but is otherwise perfect. =

=20

Questions:  Can anybody help identify this quilt as to date and =

manufacturer. It is not Marie Webster’s Poppy and it is not the =

Progress Company Poppy Wreath on p. 5 of the Mary Schaffer book. The =

flowers are similar to the Progress Poppy but they are arranged in swags =

in each quarter of the quilt sort of outlining a large quilted center; =

there are smaller versions of the motif in the outer corners of the top. =

I’m assuming I should make no attempt to remove the spots for fear of =

losing the blue quinting marks. Am I right?

Zenia or Wilene can you help? =20

My other new acquisition (a Valentine present found yesterday in =

Sciota, PA in the Poconos) is a Variable Star in cheddar, poison green =

and an odd shade of rusty red which since I saw the exhibit in =

Bethlehem last fall I associate with the Moravians. Barb Garrett will =

know exactly what I mean. Are these incredible color combinations found =

anywhere other than eastern PA?

John said he doesn’t think anybody else would want a quilt with so much =

orange. In my best condescending voice I told him it was cheddar not =

orange. “Looks like Velveeta to me” was his

reply. But I know in his secret heart he loves it too. =20

Cinda in Scranton=20

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I was in Easton, MD on the Eastern = Shore last=20 week and found a completed top of a Poppy quilt kit. The top is=20 82×98″.
The flowers are in two shades of red, the leaves = and=20 stems in two shades of green. The only identification on it is the = number=20 7-2477 stamped on the top and bottom. The workmanship is = beautiful,=20 applique and embroidery. It has a couple of “liver = spots,” but=20 is otherwise perfect.

Questions:  = Can anybody=20 help identify this quilt as to date and manufacturer.  It is not = Marie=20 Webster's Poppy and it is not the Progress Company Poppy Wreath on p. 5 = of the=20 Mary Schaffer book.  The flowers are similar to the Progress Poppy = but they=20 are arranged in swags in each quarter of the quilt sort of outlining a = large=20 quilted center; there are smaller versions of the motif in the outer = corners of=20 the top.  I'm assuming I should make no attempt to remove the spots = for=20 fear of losing the blue quinting marks.  Am I right?

Zenia or Wilene = can you=20 help? 

My other new = acquisition (a=20 Valentine present found yesterday in Sciota, PA in the Poconos) is a = Variable=20 Star in cheddar, poison green and an odd shade of  rusty red which = since I=20 saw the exhibit in Bethlehem last fall I associate with the = Moravians. =20 Barb Garrett will know exactly what I mean.  Are these incredible = color=20 combinations found anywhere other than eastern PA?

John said he doesn’t think anybody = else would=20 want a quilt with so much orange. In my best condescending voice I = told=20 him it was cheddar not orange. “Looks like Velveeta to = me” was=20 his

reply. But I know in his = secret heart he=20 loves it too.

Cinda in=20 Scranton

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Date: Mon, 15 Feb 1999 15:05:59 -0500

From: “Phyllis Twigg” ptwigg@radix.net

To: “QHL” QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: Poly batts in old quilts

Message-ID: <005a01be591e$9c0f6c60$30e230d1@jtwigg>

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Does anyone know the earliest dates for polyester batting? I have a baby

quilt in question. The owner feels it was made in 1949 but it contains a

polyester batt. According the the “Mountain Mist Blue Book of Quilts”, the

polyester batts were first marketed in 1956 in a twin size for the wholesale

price of $ 3.40. Barbara Brackman refers to poly batts as a clue to the

1960’s and later. Did any other company produce one earlier ?

Thanks !

Phyllis Twigg


Date: Mon, 15 Feb 1999 15:49:10 EST

From: QuiltFixer@aol.com

To: ordway@glas.apc.org, QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: Re: QHL: Questions; this and that

Message-ID: 194fa8f7.36c88846@aol.com

Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII

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In a message dated 2/15/99 11:19:47 AM Pacific Standard Time,

ordway@glas.apc.org writes:

<< Also, working with silk — should I use silk thread for

basting and whip stitching? >>

I always use silk thread with silk. I always try to use like thread to fabric

such as cotton to cotton, etc. I have done a lot of quilt repair work and

have found this to be best. Also have you seen much Red Embroidery in Russia?

I teach and lecture on Redwork and am always looking for more information. I

have seen lots of German work, but think there must be Russian work as well.

Toni B.

QuiltFixer@aol.com


Date: Mon, 15 Feb 1999 21:59:33 -0000

From: “Jenni Dobson” jenni@dobson4qu.freeserve.co.uk

To: “Quilt History List” QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: Thoughts on an old quilt?

Message-ID: <000801be592f$36993da0$4b02883e@jenni>

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I’d be really interested if any members of this list would like to send =

me any thoughts they have about an ‘old’ quilt I recently bought, =

intending to write about it for a short history chapter in my next book. =

I was looking for a design that would be simple to sew & originally =

thought it’d be good to choose a non-antique piece, i.e. something old =

but not significantly so, the sort of thing people might come across =

rather than a museum piece. So I decided to buy a quilt that I saw & =

took a quick pic. of last July, on sale at a quilt exhibition in Wales.

I’m still happy to write about it now I’ve got it but closer inspection =

has changed some of my ideas. I know you can’t see the pattern but if =

anyone really wants to, I could attach a pic to an e-mail (email me =

direct to request it). The quilt was labelled “Skyscrapers” and “40s / =

50s fabrics” & that it came from Ontario. Through contact with Barbara =

Brackman the block is actually already identified as one in her =

Encyclopedia called Monument, (# 889). She says it was published in the =

Ohio Farmer magazine in 1890, and is a mourning pattern. This is =

interesting to me partly because it means the pattern was already an old =

one when the blocks were made. I found this out while waiting for the =

quilt to come.

Now I have it, I don’t entirely agree with the proposed dates of the =

fabrics – I’m waiting for my Dating Fabrics book to come, but tho’ I’m =

no great scholar, I’ve helped on the UK Documentation project & many of =

the fabrics look older, some were probably recycled into blocks from =

clothing. I know a quilt can be no older than the newest fabric so it =

still might’ve been made in the 40s. However, as I handled it I turned =

to the back & this looks like quite newly washed muslin. Closer =

inspection thro’ the holes in one block also showed polyester batting. =

The general appearance of the top looks as if maybe it’s an older top =

that has been more recently layered & quilted!=20

As I didn’t buy it for great historic worth, I can live with this – in a =

way, it’ll make a good story about how you ‘detect’ its story. But it =

prompts some questions – e.g. when did the kind of polyester batting =

we’re familiar with come into production? Can anyone help me on this =

one? or with any other thoughts?

Thanks for taking time to read all this – looking forward to comments.

Jenni Dobson, UK.

——=_NextPart_000_0004_01BE592E.7841D2E0

Content-Type: text/html;

    charset="iso-8859-1"

Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable

I’d be really interested if any = members of this=20 list would like to send me any thoughts they have about an ‘old’ quilt I = recently bought, intending to write about it for a short history chapter = in my=20 next book. I was looking for a design that would be simple to sew &=20 originally thought it’d be good to choose a non-antique piece, i.e. = something=20 old but not significantly so, the sort of thing people might come across = rather=20 than a museum piece. So I decided to buy a quilt that I saw & took a = quick=20 pic. of last July, on sale at a quilt exhibition in Wales.

I’m still happy to write about it = now I’ve got=20 it but closer inspection has changed some of my ideas. I know you can’t = see the=20 pattern but if anyone really wants to, I could attach a pic to an e-mail = (email=20 me direct to request it). The quilt was labelled “Skyscrapers” = and=20 “40s / 50s fabrics” & that it came from Ontario. Through = contact=20 with Barbara Brackman the block is actually already identified as one in = her=20 Encyclopedia called Monument, (# 889). She says it was published in the = Ohio=20 Farmer magazine in 1890, and is a mourning pattern. This is interesting = to me=20 partly because it means the pattern was already an old one when the = blocks were=20 made. I found this out while waiting for the quilt to come.

Now I have it, I don’t entirely = agree with the=20 proposed dates of the fabrics – I’m waiting for my Dating Fabrics book = to come,=20 but tho’ I’m no great scholar, I’ve helped on the UK Documentation = project &=20 many of the fabrics look older, some were probably recycled into blocks = from=20 clothing. I know a quilt can be no older than the newest fabric so it = still=20 might’ve been made in the 40s. However, as I handled it I turned to the = back=20 & this looks like quite newly washed muslin. Closer inspection thro’ = the=20 holes in one block also showed polyester batting. The general appearance = of the=20 top looks as if maybe it’s an older top that has been more recently = layered=20 & quilted!

As I didn’t buy it for great = historic worth, I=20 can live with this – in a way, it’ll make a good story about how you = ‘detect’=20 its story. But it prompts some questions – e.g. when did the kind of = polyester=20 batting we’re familiar with come into production? Can anyone help me on = this=20 one? or with any other thoughts?

Thanks for taking time to read all = this -=20 looking forward to comments.

Jenni Dobson, = UK.

——=_NextPart_000_0004_01BE592E.7841D2E0–


Date: Mon, 15 Feb 1999 17:18:20 -0500

From: Vivien Lee Sayre vsayre@nesa.com

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: Penny McMorris

Message-Id: 3.0.3.32.19990215171820.0070d270@mail.nesa.com

Content-Type: text/plain; charset=”us-ascii”

Hi All,

Does anyone know Penny McMorris’ address? Is she on e-mail? Thanks in

advance for any help you can give me.

Vivien in Cold but Beautiful Massachusetts. (No snow yet 🙁 )


Date: Mon, 15 Feb 1999 17:43:14 EST

From: KareQuilt@aol.com

To: WileneSmth@aol.com, QHL-Digest@cuenet.com

Subject: Quilts Shipped overseas

Message-ID: e2c1572f.36c8a302@aol.com

Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII

Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit

RE: <A couple of years ago, I met a lady who had a friend whose son worked

nights for that dealer and his primary job was packing boxes and boxes of

quilts for shipment overseas.>

This would be a fascinating area of research. Wilene, do you have any more

info? I go to Switzerland on business twice a year. Stopped at a quilt shop

in a major city. They had stacks of antique American quilts. I was amazed, but

should not have been, I suppose. The woman was not about to tell me her trade

secrets (source). She was quite upset about an issue in Europe over

“patchworkers” vs “real quilters/quilt artists.” I had not even be aware of

such an issue prior to encountering her. Her “passion” left me speechless. My

“observer me” just LISTENED and tryed to take some mental notes. Her assistant

finally came over and intervened and diplomatically steered her partner off

her soapbox. Very interesting experience. We quilters and researchers ARE

passionate about our subject, aren’t we!


Date: Mon, 15 Feb 1999 18:37:13 EST

From: Baglady111@aol.com

To: NinePatchN@aol.com, QHL@cuenet.com, kaffee-klatsch@quilt.com

Subject: QHL: Feedsack Club Conference

Message-ID: 1f66ea8b.36c8afa9@aol.com

Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII

Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit

5th ANNUAL FEEDSACK CLUB CONFERENCE

APRIL 1999

We are

MOVING!! MOVING!! MOVING!!

NEW LOCATION

HOLIDAY INN LANCASTER-VISITORS CENTER

521 GREENFIELD ROAD

LANCASTER, PA 17601

PH 717-299-2551

DATES: APRIL 8-9-10, 1999

THURSDAY the 8th. 10:00am-6:00pm

FRIDAY AND SAT 10:00am-9:00pm

FEEDSACK QUILT SHOW

FEEDSACK DISPLAY/EXHIBIT

VENDORS

LECTURES

SHOW & TELL

DEMOS

BUY-SELL-TRADE

FOR MORE INFORMATION

SEND A LONG SELF ADDRESSED ENVELOPE TO

FEEDSACK CONFERENCE

25 S. STARR AVE #16

PITTSBURGH, PA 15202

PH. 412-766-3996


Date: Mon, 15 Feb 1999 19:29:33 EST

From: WileneSmth@aol.com

To: KareQuilt@aol.com

Cc: QHL-Digest@cuenet.com

Subject: Re: Quilts Shipped overseas

Message-ID: fbe67dc9.36c8bbed@aol.com

Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII

Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit

<< Subj: Quilts Shipped overseas

Date: 99-02-15 17:43:14 EST

From: KareQuilt

To: WileneSmth, QHL-Digest@cuenet.com

RE: <A couple of years ago, I met a lady who had a friend whose son worked

nights for that dealer and his primary job was packing boxes and boxes of

quilts for shipment overseas.>

This would be a fascinating area of research. Wilene, do you have any more

info? I go to Switzerland on business twice a year. Stopped at a quilt shop

in a major city. They had stacks of antique American quilts. I was amazed, but

should not have been, I suppose. The woman was not about to tell me her trade

secrets (source). She was quite upset about an issue in Europe over

“patchworkers” vs “real quilters/quilt artists.” I had not even be aware of

such an issue prior to encountering her. Her “passion” left me speechless. My

“observer me” just LISTENED and tryed to take some mental notes. Her assistant

finally came over and intervened and diplomatically steered her partner off

her soapbox. Very interesting experience. We quilters and researchers ARE

passionate about our subject, aren’t we! >>

Yes, I agree that it would make an interesting subject for research, and I

wish I had more info re all those boxes. I gingerly pressed for more, but she

seemed reluctant after I showed interest in, not to mention knowledge of, the

subject. I suppose she felt that she may have let the cat out of the bag so

to speak. But Switzerland has been a country that I’ve often wondered about

and I’m not really sure why except to say that the last good quilt that I sold

about 1986 when I had a small booth in a local antique mall was to a lady

visiting America from Switzerland. I can’t remember now if she bought quilts

from the others in that mall or not. Does Switzerland have less stringent

import regulations maybe? Or is it its rather central location?

<< stacks of antique American quilts >> Hmmmm! Interesting, especially the

“stacks” part. –Wilene


Date: Mon, 15 Feb 1999 20:00:28 -0500

From: “jawhite@courant.infi.net” jawhite@courant.infi.net

To: Quilt History list QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: Penny McMorris

Message-ID: 36C8C32C.5DBE@courant.infi.net

Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii

Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

Hi Vivien. You can mail Penny at electric quilt list

info-eq@lyris.planetpatchwork.com or equilt@wcnet.org.

Judy White


Date: Mon, 15 Feb 1999 21:26:20 -0500

From: Barb Garrett bgarrett@fast.net

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: PA German color combinations

Message-ID: 36C8D74B.AB9F32FE@fast.net

Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii

Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

Cinda and interested others –

First, the Variable Star quilt in cheddar, poison green and rusty red

sounds wonderful!. Cinda asked if these color combinations are found

anywhere else besides Southeastern PA. Yes, they are found 1 other

place.

At Jeannette Lesansky’s Symposium at Franklin and Marshall College in

Lancaster, PA, in 1991, there was a speaker from the North Carolina

Quilt Project, Kathy Sullivan. She spoke about the very German quilts,

with very “strange” combinations of fabrics, found in one part of North

Carolina. Her talk particularly stuck with me because these were the

first antique quilts I was exposed to and don’t think the color

combinations strange at all.

Kathy’s presentation is included in Jeanette’s book, Bits and Pieces. A

quote —

“When it came to their quilts’ patterns, colors, and designs, the German

quiltmakers relied on their own cultural standards — most obvious in

their choice of color. As is true in the quilts made by their PA

brethren, North Carolina quiltmakers showed a preference for bright,

vivid, even gaudy color schemes.”

While I disagree with the designation “gaudy”, I have heard that word

used to describe these quilts numerous times. The article says the

German settlers came from the southeastern counties (Berks, Montgomery,

Lancaster, York) looking for fertile, cheap farm land. She also

mentions a Moravian settlement traceable to Bethlehem, PA. Being

located in the south, the quilts differ from the PA quilts in that they

used more solids (locally made therefore cheaper) than the prints (had

to be imported from the north therefore more expensive) available to the

PA quilters. These quilts date from the second half of the 19th

century.

Enjoy your 2 new quilts, Cinda.

Barb in southeastern PA

bgarrett@fast.net

Date: Mon, 15 Feb 1999 20:49:56 -0600

From: Russell-Hill russhill@ctesc.net

To: Quilt Heritage List QHL@cuenet.com

Good evening everyone,

I am writting for a friend who lives in England and had asked me about 2

books and my thoughts on them and if I had any others that I could

suggest . Well I sent my opinions on the 2 but I would like to ask you

all the same question.

She would like to get a book about quilts and the history of quilts

during the Civil War. She asked about “Quilts of the Civil War” and

“Hidden in Plain View.” She also asked about recommandations of other

books I thought might be better. That question I did not have an answer

to but thought that some one on this list would and would be willing to

also give their thoughts on the other two.

Thanks for your help.

Debbie


Date: Mon, 15 Feb 1999 21:01:42 -0600

From: Russell-Hill russhill@ctesc.net

To: Barb Garrett bgarrett@fast.net

CC: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: Re: QHL: PA German color combinations

Message-ID: 36C8DF96.75CB@ctesc.net

Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii

Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

Barb Garrett wrote:

>

Cinda and interested others –

>

First, the Variable Star quilt in cheddar, poison green and rusty red

sounds wonderful!. Cinda asked if these color combinations are found

anywhere else besides Southeastern PA. Yes, they are found 1 other

place.

>

She spoke about the very German quilts,

with very “strange” combinations of fabrics, found in one part of North

>

Hello All,

I live in a german town in Texas call Fredericksburg. Founded in 1846

and very German down to the colors. there are many old houses that are

painted with the cheddar, poison green (maybe dark forest green more

than poison ) and rusty red. These are definately German colors. The

main color is the green and trimmed in cheddar and rusty red. Iliked it

so much that when we built our house I painted it in those colors.

Williamsburg has their colors and Fredericksburg TX has theirs.

Debbie


From: Laura Hobby Syler <texas_quilt.co@mail.airmail.net

Hi Phyllis,

From the information that I have I agree with the ’56 date as to the first

poly batts and then in pretty wide distribution in the ’60’s and praised by

every quiltmaker from coast to coast in the ’70’s and up to the late ’80’s

. When I opened my quilt shop in 1980 we didn’t even carry that “old nasty

stuff” and I am paying for it now with the abrasion from the inside out

of all the wonderful 1890’s tops that I had quilted up. The best thing to

remember is that your client may be right…..the top may have been

pieced in ’49 but not finished for several years…..of course none of my

desendants will have that problem dating my quilts…..they are all tops!

See ya in a couple of months!

Laura

At 03:05 PM 2/15/99 -0500, Phyllis Twigg wrote:

Does anyone know the earliest dates for polyester batting? I have a baby

quilt in question. The owner feels it was made in 1949 but it contains a

polyester batt. According the the “Mountain Mist Blue Book of Quilts”, the

polyester batts were first marketed in 1956 in a twin size for the wholesale

price of $ 3.40. Barbara Brackman refers to poly batts as a clue to the

1960’s and later. Did any other company produce one earlier ?

Thanks !


Date: Mon, 15 Feb 1999 20:43:57 -0700

From: “Jeanne.Fetzer” Jeanne.Fetzer@integrityonline3.com

Did anyone see the Antiques Roadshow on Feb. 15 which included a red and =

green quilt from 1850?

I would be interested in your feelings about the price given to the =

owner. I recognize that without seeing the quilt in person, it is =

difficult to pin down a price. I’ll try to describe it as best I can:

full size; never used

dated on back as 1850 – made by owner’s grandmother

red and green princess feathers (at least four)

quilting was dense and seemed well executed from what I could see on the =

TV

The price range was $12,000 – 15,000. My first reaction was that this =

was a quilt of museum quality.

any comments? What do you think about the range. I know I’m probably =

asking the impossible, but I would be interested in some reaction if =

someone else saw it.

Thanks! Jeanne.Fetzer@integrityonline.com=20


Date: Tue, 16 Feb 1999 02:36:03 EST

From: WileneSmth@aol.com

re: QHL: underground railroad, from Cindy Honeycutt:

<< The discussion among the ladies in her church was exactly as I read on this

list: different quilt patterns meant different things, and even the way a

quilt was hanging outside meant something different. >>

Do you mean the ladies were talking about this WITHOUT reading Jackie and

Raymond’s new book? If so, I think we’d all like to hear more. Their book,

by the way, is Hidden in Plain View by Jacqueline L. Tobin and Raymond G.

Dobard.

re: QHL: Poppy quilt top, etc., from Cinda in Scranton.

<< Wilene can you help? >>

Cinda, I’m not as “up” on 20th century appliques as some others are even

though I’m trying to enter as many as possible in my database along with their

numbers, if known. I did a search for the number, 2477, and didn’t come up

with anything for you, and “poppy” has so many entries as to be nearly useless

in a search. Hope someone else will know more.

re: QHL: Thoughts on an old quilt?, from Jenni Dobson, UK.

<< The quilt was labelled “Skyscrapers” and “40s / 50s fabrics” & that it came

from Ontario. Through contact with Barbara Brackman the block is actually

already identified as one in her Encyclopedia called Monument, (# 889). She

says it was published in the Ohio Farmer magazine in 1890, and is a mourning

pattern. >>

There are two similar patterns (#888 and #889 in Barbara’s Encyclopedia) that

seem to commemorate the death of President James A. Garfield, 20th U. S.

President, assassinated July 2, 1881, died Sept. 19, 1881, so it seems safe to

assume that the patterns most probably originated after this date. You

mentioned that your quilt came from Ontario (I assume in Canada?) and, after

seeing it, question that it might be earlier than the 1940s or 1950s as it was

represented. If the fabrics turn out to be a lot earlier (like the 1880s

maybe?), then it seems rather safe to assume that it was probably made in the

states.

Design #888 was published in Farm and Fireside magazine in the 1880s (exact

date unknown) and was identified as Garfield’s Monument. A pattern of this

name was offered by a reader of Good Housekeeping magazine in the October 26,

1889, issue, but it was not illustrated in the magazine. Then Ladies Art

included it in their catalog beginning about 1895 as their No. 136, calling it

by the same name but superimposing a capital G on the base.

888 seems to be the more common design of the two, although quilts of either

design are uncommon. One is pictured on p. 68 of Marsha MacDowell’s (et al.)

Michigan Quilts (1987); another one is on p. 9 of Victoria Hoffman’s catalog,

Quilts: A Window to the Past (North Andover, MA: Museum of American Textile

History, 1991); and I lucked into one in near mint condition made with 1880s

prints at an estate sale a couple of years ago. I’d often wondered if women

actually made any quilts using this strange design, and now I know that at

least a few did.

Volume 2 (revised in 1987) of Barbara’s Encyclopedia indicates that Design

889 was published in the Ohio Farmer magazine, ca. 1890, and called The

Monument. It’s made from pieced strips laid horizontally and, from a

distance, looks quite similar to #888. So far, I’ve not found an original

clipping of this one for my records.

re: polyester batting — I’ll try to look into this tomorrow and see what the

date is on the earliest Mountain Mist ad in my records that mentions

polyester. –Wilene


Date: Tue, 16 Feb 1999 08:45:24 -0500

From: “jawhite@courant.infi.net” <jawhite@courant.infi.net

Just to add my $.02 to this discussion – I have a poison green/chrome

yellow (which today is called cheddar) polkadot (the yellow has black

dots) drunkard’s path that I got at Brimfield, MA several years ago.

The dealer was not a quilt person. She had picked this up at an estate

sale in Maine. The quilt had a small hole in it and the backing didn’t

go with the front. It had been stored in a bag with a fabric softener

and smelled to high heaven so I took it home, took off the back, threw

out the middle and tossed the top and back in the wash. The quilt had

been put together with several different kinds and colors of thread

including blue embroidery thread and something akin to buttonhole

twist. So when I took it out of the washer, the borders came off like

they had been put on with a zipper which was okay because I needed to

use some of that fabric to repair the hole. I have always called this

my quilt with a growth because, even though the dealer I bought it from

wasn’t a quilter, she knew that quilts were stuffed and that’s she had

repaired the hole – by making a little stuffed patch and sewing it over

the hole. I kept that little patch because it is so cute. Anyhow, I

now have this wonderful top which has been dated by a reputable quilt

person to around 1865 and I have repaired it quite nicely and will hand

quilt it. Does anyone know if this color combination was indigenous to

Maine and did it migrate to other parts of the US?

Judy White – CT


Date: Tue, 16 Feb 1999 08:56:42 EST

From: JQuilt@aol.com

I remember a quilt show on Simply Quilts…with Roberta Horton and Mary

Mashuta….Alex Anderson picked out the combination of orange, red and green

and

Roberta saying they were those being the colors of the German “1860 quilt”

jean

jquilt@aol.com


Date: Tue, 16 Feb 1999 09:19:23 EST

From: Qltldy10@aol.com

To: qhl@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: the Antiques Roadshow Quilt….

Message-ID: 90fcbf64.36c97e6b@aol.com

Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII

Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit

… was red, green, and orange! I don’t remember where they were- Michigan?

Anyway, my thoughts are that these guys are quoting Christy’s kind of prices,

and yes, I thought the quilt was worth exctly what he said. It’s just that

you and I don’t usually shop at major auctions. In York, Maine, there is a

very nice antique multi dealer shop- first table, teacup size, on the way in,

is $7,000. A few months back they had a visiting dealer, a beautiful

Baltimore album (personally, I thought is may have been Pa), priced at

$29,5000. Was ca 1849, and while I decided not to write a check =8-0 I

fugured it was priced so someone would buy it. this dealership, by the way,

does not take credit cards. To me, it means they are selling to folks with

larger cash flows then I tend to have…..

  Beth in Maine

   qltldy10@aol.com 

Date: Tue, 16 Feb 1999 08:38:53 -0600 (CST)

From: “Karen Benson” benson@mailbox.mail.umn.edu


Date: Tue, 16 Feb 1999 14:13:24 -0000

From: “Jenny Couper” <jennycouper@lineone.net


Date: Tue, 16 Feb 1999 10:00:29 EST

From: JQuilt@aol.com

in the year 2,099….can you imagine some quilt appraiser/restorer…trying to

figure out what year the quilt was made by looking at the batting…

in 1999 there was poly/cotton, cotton, silk,wool and poly batting

available…

jean

jquilt@aol.com


Date: Tue, 16 Feb 1999 10:29:57 EST

From: JQuilt@aol.com

sounds like the antique dealer in York Maine, who doesn’t take credit cards

and sells $29,000 quilts…has an clientele of Colombian drug lords. Or maybe

York Maine is #1 on the pickpockets top 10 list.

jean


Date: Tue, 16 Feb 1999 08:09:28 -0800

From: Kathy Tavares <kmtavare@uci.edu

Did any of you happend to see Antiques Road Show on Monday, February 15?

My DH and I watch this weekly whenever we can. Anyway last night they had

a quilt which they valued at auction to be $12,000 to $15,000. It was

1850’s and as far as we could tell from what they showed on TV, in

excellent condition. They woman who owned it kept it stored in a cedar

chest and never has displayed it, so the color was not faded at all. I

don’t know if I could have something like that and not be able to display

it.

Kathy T


Date: Tue, 16 Feb 1999 12:18:17 EST

From: KareQuilt@aol.com

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: Quilts of the Future

Message-ID: 9d32b484.36c9a859@aol.com

Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII

Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit

Forgive me if this has been posted before. Can’t remember . the gray matter

is getting mushier with every grandchild that is born .

NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WOMEN IN THE ARTS – “Quilts of the Future”–a day-long

symposium in Washington, DC, at the National Museum of Women in the Arts, co-

sponsored by NMWA and Art Quilt, Network, New York (with artists from AQN-NY

presenting slides of their work) will be held on January 22, 2000. Speakers

are Rebecca Stevens (Textile Museum), Stacy Hollander (Museum of American Folk

Art), and Cathy Rasmussen (Exec. Dir. of Studio At Quilt Associates). Topics

are quilts in museum collections, traditional quiltmakers who have become

quilt artists, and professionally trained artists who have become quilt

artists. Tickets will be available from NMWA in the fall. More to come much

later, but mark your calendars if you are at all interested. 202-783-5000,

1250 New York Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20005


Date: Tue, 16 Feb 1999 12:46:51 +0000

From: Shirley McElderry tigersoup@lisco.net

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: Poppy quilt

Message-ID: 36C968B6.179F@lisco.net

Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii

Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

Cinda: I found your poppy quilt top pictured in a Herrschner’s 1963-64

catalog. It is called “Majestic Poppy” and is described as: “For

applique! Sunny California inspired design! Quilt top stamped with

applique and quilting pattern on type 128 white sheeting. Washfast

appliques, poppy colors with green leaves. 7-2477 Poppy Quilt Top

$6.59.” By the way, one could order a “finishing kit” consisting of

Mountain Mist seamless cotton quilt batting, white percale quilt

backing, a quilting needle and 3 spools of quilting thread for $4.98. Or

the quilt top kit and the finishing kit both for $10.98.

Since your top has the Herrschner’s number stamped on it, I’m going to

go waayy out on a limb here and suggest it may have been a special order

from a company. I know that Herrschner’s did retail Homeneedlecraft

kits, because I have found those kits offered in their catalogs. I think

there were some Progress kits offered, too. And it seems–here I go on

another limb–that the original quilt kit manufacturers offered kits for

quite a while before they were ever advertised in Herrschner’s, so I am

wondering if perhaps Herrschner’s simply bought out the discontinued

kits? Xenia, or Bev D. what do you think?

Shirley Mc from where winter is back again in Iowa.


Date: Mon, 15 Feb 1999 01:48:41 -0500

From: “susanlk” susanlk@erols.com

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: vintage quilts

Message-ID: <01be58af$3912b140$LocalHost@kannenbel>

Content-Type: text/plain;

    charset="iso-8859-1"

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I just came from an antique show and saw a vendor, Lin’s Quilts, from

Connecticut. She’s been around for several years and has a beautiful and

large selection of vintage quilts. She also sells individual and packages of

vintage blocks, and tops. As for her quilts, they are all in perfect or near

perfect condition; mostly dating from 1860-1890 or so with a very few

earlier and some few from the 1920s-1940s. I have noticed several factors

about her quilts: 1) at every show I see her, the inventory she has is many

times larger than anyone else’s 2)her quality is superb; most other quilts

have more condition problems 3)I do see some quilts time after time. This

last factor could suggest the market is softening; on the other hand, I’ve

noticed fewer and fewer of her quilts are priced below $1000. Where a couple

years ago a quilt marked $1800 seemed high to me, now there are several at

that price and a few between $2000 and $3000. So the fact that some quilts

are still there from year to year, and only one or two have been marked

down, and there are many new additions to her inventory, and the prices are

as described, all tells me that she’s buying more than ever, holding some

for a long time, but ($64000question) must be selling enough to justify a

busy schedule travelling around doing show after show. And there’s no doubt

that the average price I see at her booth is UP over recent years. I would

not be surprised to find quilts at general antique dealers who may have an

entire estate which included a few quilts to have all kinds of different

prices since as non-specialists in quilts, they’ll be more likely to accept

an offer just to turn over their goods.

As for the auction information, one single event, one single quilt, none of

these defines a trend. To be valid a large number of instances has to be

tracked for any credible result. Finally, I’ve heard more than once that

value is definitely geographic which makes perfectly good sense. If “new”

quilts are coming to market in locations where vintage quilts are likely to

be found, and the “money” looking for such quilts is elsewhere, the value

will be higher where the money is and lower where the quilts are, to

oversimplify the question. I have been told by appraisers that certain parts

of the country will bring better prices than in other parts of the country.

If you believe the “Antiques Road Show” appraisers, they reiterate

frequently that an item will be worth “even more” when local to the place

where it was made, as early furniture for example has a more enthusiastic

following in the region where it was made. SusanLK



Date: Tue, 16 Feb 1999 17:27:29 -0600

From: Russell-Hill <russhill@ctesc.net


Date: Tue, 16 Feb 1999 22:07:41 +0300

From: “John Ordway” <ordway@glas.apc.org

I went silk shopping today.

Silk is not that readily available here and you have to know which stores

carry it. A nearby store has a great selection, but it mostly for

dressmaking purposes. I found the weight I wanted — I’m not sure what it’s

called — it’s raw silk that is heavy, almost of a brocade weight. My first

trip to the store was very disappointing — no way was the woman going to

cut me any small amounts — it would interfere with her reading her

newspaper! I went back later in the afternoon and succumbed to a meter each

of three different colors for baby blocks at 130 cm width — at $20 a meter.

Don’t gasp. I have no idea whether it’s a lot or money or not, but it’s

gorgeous.

The saleswoman said it was from Liechtenstein. So much for getting romantic

and getting Russian silk!

Q: I want to handpiece baby blocks — does anyone have any suggestions on

whether I would need to paper piece these — the silk is heavy and would

definitely hold up on it’s own with piecing. Does anyone have any

experience with looking at antique silk quilts: are they paper-backed?

The other fun thing was finding silk thread — 23 different colors. They

were on very old cardboard spools that said 50k (50 kopek) which even in the

old days at other exchange rates was not very much (in the 1980’s it would

have been $.80). God knows what warehouse they’ve been sitting in for

years. They were 6 rubles today (about 27 cents) for 100 meters — not

huge amounts. I’ll now have to match the colors with the fabric I bought

and go back and buy more — otherwise I’ll probably never see it again!

Maryjo in Moscow


Date: Tue, 16 Feb 1999 19:40:32 EST

From: SudaNim@aol.com

I’ve used the heavy, nubby “raw silk” for a quilt…triple Irish chain as a

wedding present. I’ve been collecting it for years through thrift stores.

Whenever I’m in a second-hand store, I scan the women’s suit-and-dress rack.

There’s a lot of raw silk outfits out there that are pitted out, or stained,

or sun-faded just on one spot. They’re really cheap then.

I made a 3×5 foot all-silk quilt, and probably paid about $20 total for all

the fabric. I think the cotton batting was the biggest expense.

Silk is definitely balkier than cotton (bulkier, too rim shot). It shifts

around as you assemble the top. I just pinned the holy heck out of it; didn’t

use foundation paper, and it went fine. But paper sure wouldn’t hurt.

Especially if you’re doing a more complicated pattern.

Date: Tue, 16 Feb 1999 23:16:40 -0600

From: Mary Waller mswaller@iw.net

I also saw the quilt Jeanne asked about on ‘Antiques Roadshow’. I’m not

going to second-guess Leslie Keno’s estimate, but I will mention his

business is in New York City and his main area of expertise seems to be

furniture, it’s a great quilt in great condition, has a family history

and a cross-stitched label about the maker and the person who made the

label on the back. I was concentrating on every word, so when they went

to the next item, DH Steve said, “I can’t believe you weren’t yelling,

‘Tell her to get it the hell out of the cedar chest!'”. But of course I

would have added, “And refold it!”

Mary Waller, Vermillion, SD


Date: Wed, 17 Feb 1999 07:36:52 EST

From: CToczek@aol.com

Hi everyone,

I’ve lurked for awhile; enjoying the commentary and doctoring the boys’

chicken pox here at home.

Poly batts-For a while I’ve been machine quilting several smaller projects,

playing with the technique. (new things-not vintage) However, recently I went

back to a small applique project to hand quilt and was reminded of how much

tougher, literally, it is to hand quilt through cotton batting as opposed to

the thin poly batts. Yes, I saw posts here regarding wool batts and the newer

cotton batts like Hobbs organic and Fairfield Soft Touch, but I would like to

throw out this question:

Can any of you say from hands-on experience that you’ve found one of these

cottons to quilt as easy as the thin poly-batts? Any “stories from the field”

are welcome.

Thanks,

Carla, at chilly West Point, NY, who hears of 70F from Mom in Little Rock, AR


Date: Wed, 17 Feb 1999 08:07:23 -0500

From: Alan Kelchner quiltfix@mail.jax.bellsouth.net

To: qhl@cuenet.com

I’m glad to know my predilection for using orange in my quilts is

genetic !

(family is Pennsylvania Dutch). But to paraphrase an old quote, gaudy is

as

gaudy does, so forgive the poor souls that call PA German quilts gaudy.

They

don’t know better 🙂

The lack of knowledge of quilting in dealers extends from country

auctioneers all the way to those fancy-types that appraise for the

Antiques

Roadshow. I watched it Monday night and was dumbfounded when they

appraised a fantastic quilt (textiles are so uncommon on this show).

Well, the appraiser, Mr. Keno from Sotheby’s (that 40ish thin blond guy

who’s a furniture expert, and occasionally we see him with his brother –

they look very much alike). Anyhow, he appraised the piece as a piece

of folk art, rather than as a quilt. Verrrrrry

interesting. But his ignorance was showing very badly (I was quite

embarrassed for him). He talked about the design work, the “pinwheels”

pattern, and the

weaving patterns (this was a magnificent 1850 Princess Feather, four

blocks, peacocks and other birds appliqued into the border,and it was

quilted, not woven !). He appraisal bowled me over. I’m definitely

dealing in the wrong sellers’ market. But really, if you’re gonna get up

and talk, you need to talk intelligently. I was so disturbed by it that

I emailed the Antiques Roadshow. It’s a disservice to the viewers to

appraiser something when you can’t discuss the piece properly. And yes,

this was a Southeby’s auction price for what appeared to be an

extraordinary.

What’s that other saying …. Keep your mouth shut and be thought a

fool, or

open it and remove all doubt ……?

Alan


Date: Wed, 17 Feb 1999 08:07:43 -0600

From: Laura Hobby Syler texas_quilt.co@mail.airmail.net

Hi Carla,

As I stated before, I quilted many, many tops in the late ’70’s & early

’80’s with Fairfield poly batts….traditional to be specific, until they

came out witht he low loft…..and yes, they are like quilting on butter…

I now use the either the F. Soft Touch or the Hobbs Organic. Yes, they are

a little stiffer to quilt on, and I do bend many more needles that I would

like, but I am still able to get my 18-22 (on a really good day) stitches

to the inch …..incidently, not only does the batting effect the

sluggishness of your stitching, but I’ve found that the fabric really plays

more of a role. I am finishing up a baby quilt that my mother did for my

cousins baby and they used decorator fabric with a shrinirized (sp)

finish…boy, even after washing it’s so stiff I cant quilt on if for very

long…and they put a poly bat it in!

As I tell my beginning students, quilting is a masochistic art form and we

just have to * suffer in silence*

Laura


Date: Wed, 17 Feb 1999 08:10:10 -0600

From: Laura Hobby Syler texas_quilt.co@mail.airmail.net

I’m glad that others of you saw the quilt on Antiques Roadshow.

I loved Mary’s comments – and her husband’s. I am teaching a conservation

class in a couple of weeks and will probably tell them remember at least

their two

comments.

As to the price of the quilt . . . after seeing some of the pieces in the

James collection last fall, I’m not so sure the pricing was out of line

(remembering he is from New York.)

We were shown a Baltimore Album quilt which the James’ paid $160,000 for in

1989.

A quilt is always worth what someone will pay for it “with a knowledgeable

seller and a knowledgeable buyer.


Date: Wed, 17 Feb 1999 11:57:15 -0600

From: Laura Hobby Syler texas_quilt.co@mail.airmail.net

To: “Jeanne.Fetzer” Jeanne.Fetzer@integrityonline3.com,

    <quiltfix@mail.jax.bellsouth.net>, "QHL" <qhl@cuenet.com>

Subject: Re: QHL: Re: colors/dealers

Message-Id: 3.0.3.32.19990217115715.006de3a4@mail.airmail.net

Content-Type: text/plain; charset=”us-ascii”

Jeanne, et al,

Did anyone else happen to see Martha this morning? I caught just part of it

and she had a woman on there that was talking about caring for your antique

and fine linens. She was a textile conservator. She showed how to wash a

deuvet cover using Orvus paste in a professional washing table (can you see

the envy here) like the one that Maury has…. Her formula for Orvus was

1 tsp per quart of water or 1 TBS per gallon…..is’nt this similar to what

was discussed in Omaha this year?

Then she talked about storage, acid free tissue, buffered tissue and acid

free boxes….She also discussed all of the wrong ways that people send

items into them wrapped in paper, masking tape and all the horrors….

anyone else see the spot?

Laura

In springy N. Texas

>


Date: Wed, 17 Feb 1999 11:23:20 -0700

From: “Jeanne.Fetzer” Jeanne.Fetzer@integrityonline3.com

To: “QHL” qhl@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: Re: Orvus

Message-ID: <000801be5aa2$ab12f260$2ce399d0@jeanne.fetzer>

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    charset="iso-8859-1"

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I saw it, too. There are a couple of things different about her

recommendations on the use of Orvus. One is that Deborah Bede uses a lot

(understatement) more than 1 TBS. per gallon. Due to my brain cell

deterioration, I can’t remember the amount, but I think that it was a least

a cup to a gallon of water. I am sure it would depend on the amount of soil

and the type of textile you are cleaning. Also, other sources for Orvus are

available in larger quantities – like an animal feed store. It is horse

shampoo.

Please correct me if any of this is incorrect. The great thing about brain

deterioration is that you also lose any sensitivity to correction! Jeanne


Date: Wed, 17 Feb 1999 17:42:36 EST

From: SudaNim@aol.com

To: qhl@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: story on URR code

Message-ID: 5eb4e7bb.36cb45dc@aol.com

Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII

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Thanks to the folks who responded to my request for interviews. There were

enough of you that I didn’t get to call everyone. Apologies to those I left

out. (And also, apologies to those I interviewed who also got left out.)

The story is scheduled to run Sunday. It may be posted on the web site as

early as Saturday; not sure about that, though. The paper’s website is

www.dallasnews.com.

Be warned it’s not entirely about the URR code, or the Hidden in Plain View

book. It’s more of an essay, based on an interesting personal fabric-

identification experience. I only get to write in first-person about once a

year, so gotta milk it for all it’s worth! 🙂

Aline

From: KirkColl@aol.com

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: Re: Orvus and cotton batting

Message-ID: 2a7aa2fc.36cb8c0e@aol.com

Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII

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  1. I was talking to Deb Bede yesterday. She”s planning to move to New

Hampshire and go into private practice in late spring/early summer, so all of

you in New England will have a new great resource. She recommended a 2%

solution of Orvus for maximum cleaning power. It also takes a lot of water

for rinsing, and of course she uses all deionized water (special plumbing).

  1. Re: cotton batting. The new batts, especially Quilter’s Dream, are great,

but it still helps to have the right needles. We recommend the Majestic 88

which is an English steel needle that is brought to the States and taken to an

electroplater where the outer coating of steel is stripped off and then

individually dipped in nickle. If you look at a regular needle under a

microscope, there are all kinds of little ruts from the mass production

process. These are absolutely smooth.

They are expensive — 2 for $3.75, but I always tell people there are very few

things you can get for less than $5 that will change your life, but this is

one of them. The downside is that they are so slick they will fall into your

pin cushion, never to be seen again, so they must be kept in their case when

not in use. Also, if you get them mixed up with your other needles you have

to get out the microscope.

They are not stronger than steel needles, but because there is no resistance

as they go through the batting, it takes a lot less effort to quilt, usually

meaning fewer bent and broken needles.

I don’t mean this to be an ad — I know these are available at some other

shops and frankly I wish every shop in the country carried them because it

would convert a lot more people to using cotton batting. They are great for

wool as well, and an absolute must for silk batting. Plus I usually lose

money selling them — by the time I pay for the 800 call and explain about the

needle I’m in the hole about $5 on the sale.

Nancy Kirk

The Kirk Collection

www.kirkcollection.com


Date: Thu, 18 Feb 1999 00:07:54 -0500

From: “J. G. Row” Judygrow@blast.net

Correct me if I am wrong.

Deborah said that the “ions”(?) in Orvus bind themselves individually to

particles of dirt in the object being washed. When all the Orvus particles

are attached, no more cleaning can be done. So you might as well use a lot

of Orvus the first wash, than have to go back and do a second wash. We want

a lot of suds and foam. No suds, no foam, no cleaning.

Yes? Do I have it right?

Judy in Ringoes, NJ

judygrow@blast.net


Date: Thu, 18 Feb 1999 07:35:02 -0500

From: Alan Kelchner quiltfix@mail.jax.bellsouth.net

To: qhl@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: Orvus

Message-ID: 36CC08F5.657FDD2B@mail.jax.bellsouth.net

Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii

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If you want large quantities of Orvus, go to your local feed-n-tack

store (supplies for your barnyard animals, for all you city-types .

Hmm, for you those stores may not be all that local !! ) And if memory

serves me right, when I last saw a large bottle at the feed store, it

said on the label it was for washing the teats on a cow’s udder prior to

milking. The horse shampoo is the Mane and Tail on the supermarket

shelves. But if you buy this stuff at the feed store, it’s much more

inexpensive than those 8 oz bottles at Joann’s !

Alan


Date: Thu, 18 Feb 1999 06:42:46 -0600

From: “Sehoy L. Welshofer” sw4quilt@bellsouth.net

To: “QHL” QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: batting

Message-ID: <000001be5b3c$2f91c400$1e01a8c0@patrick>

Content-Type: text/plain;

    charset="iso-8859-1"

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Hi everyone,

Can any of you say from hands-on experience that you’ve found one of these

cottons to quilt as easy as the thin poly-batts? Any “stories from the

field”

are welcome.

Thanks,

Carla,

Reply:

Clara – I use nothing but Hobbs all cotton or 20/80 for my hand quilting. I

love it. The needle glides through with no problem at all. The secret for

hand quilting is to presoak, spin out, put in dryer on high heat. No, it

doesn’t come apart, and it doesn’t shrink. It comes out of the dryer

wonderfully soft.

Visit Web Threads, the Newsletter for Net Savvy Quilters at:

http://personal.bna.bellsouth.net/bna/s/w/sw4quilt/index.htm

Date: Thu, 18 Feb 1999 08:02:30 -0600

From: Laura Hobby Syler texas_quilt.co@mail.airmail.net

To: “J. G. Row” Judygrow@blast.net, “Quilt History List” QHL@cuenet.com,

    <Jeanne.Fetzer@integrityonline3.com>

Subject: Re: QHL: Deborah Bede and Orvus

Message-Id: 3.0.3.32.19990218080230.006f52e0@mail.airmail.net

Content-Type: text/plain; charset=”us-ascii”

Judy, Even though I was not in Omaha, I have talked to a couple of my

friends that work in the textiles testing lab here for JC Penney’s and

they concur with Deborah’s theory….molecule for molecule kinda

thing……as opposed to detergent that acts in a scraping method to remove

the dirt molecules the Orvus binds itself to the dirt ( do they have

something that I can spray over my whole house?????)

Laura

In Springy N. Texas.

>

>


Date: Thu, 18 Feb 1999 08:59:52 -0700

From: Eileen Trestain ejtrestain@earthlink.net

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: Orvus

Message-ID: 36CC38F8.1E7B6033@earthlink.net

Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii

Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

Deborah Bede said three cups of Orvus to 10 gallons of water, in a big

textile tank, with very little agitation. You need enough soap molecules

to bond with the free radical dirt molecules to remove dirt. Not enough

soap leaves the textile still dirty. She said to rinse rinse rinse.

Even after many rinses, you may have a few bubbles in a test tube when

shaken, but she also said you could have bubbles in the test tube when

the soap could no longer be chemically measured.

Eileen


Date: Thu, 18 Feb 1999 11:59:31 -0800

From: “R & L Carroll” Robert.J.Carroll@GTE.net

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: Orvus

Message-ID: <01be5b79$4da3bf60$b134fcd0@r.-carroll>

Content-Type: text/plain;

    charset="iso-8859-1"

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Hello! Our quilt study group had a speaker a few months ago, Kay Walcher, a

textile conservator. She mentioned that other conservators in their group

were no longer using Orvus because it leaves a residue which shows up later

as a film on textiles. They have seen it most notably on carpets. They

feel that it cannot be rinsed out completely. For myself, I have not found

Orvus cleans a quilt very well. I don’t see the point of washing a quilt if

it does not clean up. Using the high concentrations mentioned would only add

to the difficulties of rinsing. Has anyone used the new Quiltwash by

Craftgard? I met the people from Quiltwash and they tell me it is perfectly

safe for antique quilts, and that Piecemakers is using it for all their

antique quilts. They explained it all in scientific terms, but I’ve

forgotten. I have used it to wash new quilts and it does a great job of

cleaning.

Laurette in So. California


Date: Thu, 18 Feb 1999 17:12:39 -0500

From: Steve Greco GrandmasAttic@compuserve.com

I had to laugh about the comment that your dear husband said he couldn’t

believe you weren’t yelling “tell her to get it out of the cedar chest”

because when my husband and son came into the living room during Antiques

Roadshow, they actually did see me hollering at the TV, “Get it out of the

Cedar Chest and for heaven’s sake REFOLD it!!!” I too noticed that this

fantastically beautiful quilt was being talked about as a piece of “folk

art” and not as quilt, and I couldn’t BELIEVE the guy doing the appraising

didn’t know what he was talking about. Sigh. Anyway, husband and son

decided I needed to calm down with a cup of hot tea since I was yelling at

the TV!.

Rachel Greco

Grandma’s Attic Sewing Emporium, Inc.

155 SW Court Street

Dallas, OR 97338

1-503-623-0451

e-mail: GrandmasAttic@compuserve.com

www.grandmasatticquilting.com


Date: Thu, 18 Feb 1999 15:53:32 -0700

From: “jenniferl hill” hilljl@shaw.wave.ca

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: Poly vs. Cotton batts

Message-Id:

Content-Type: text/plain; charset=”us-ascii”

The first quilts that I made were quilted with poly batts, on the advice of

my aunt, who taught me the basics. She was one of those mid-century

quilters for whom poly batting was the best thing to happen to quilting

since the sewing machine (she obviously never used a rotary cutter!). By

1994 I decided to try cotton, since I liked the old fashioned feel it

imparted. I used Hobbs Heirloom, and I sure regretted it, at least for the

first few “reaches” of my queen-sized Lone Star. However, by the time I

finished it, I was quite accustomed to it, and now, I think I could quilt

through steel wool, if I really had to (well, maybe not!) I use cotton

batting almost exclusively now, and I find poly quilts have a very limp

drape to them.

My favourites are Hobbs Organic Cotton for very fine work, and Mountain

Mist Blue Ribbon for scrappy, “utility” quilts. I like to quilt rather

densely, so I don’t think it worthwhile to pay extra for the brands that

say they can be quilted up to 5″-10″ apart.

Like Laura mentioned, the fabric used can make a big difference, blends,

and decorator fabric being tough. However, I think the quilting pattern

chosen can also have an effect. I did a fairly comprehensive survey of

quilting needles on a wholecloth muslin quilt I made. I broke over 40

needles in it, quilting lots of feathers and grape clusters.

Jennifer Hill

Calgary, AB

Date: Fri, 19 Feb 1999 08:45:06 EST

From: CToczek@aol.com

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: batt info

Message-ID: 9d3df7a9.36cd6ae2@aol.com

Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII

Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit

Thanks to everyone who has offered field advice on the cotton batts. Thanks

also, to Nancy, in regard to the note about the needles. You read my mind! I

have wondered if perhaps my difficulties with the cotton batts might be

partially related to my generic quilting needles. I’ll try the stronger ones

and see if I find an improvement.

Best to all,

Carla, at West Point where the snow forecast disappeared…..as a new resident

up here, I think you’re all pulling my leg about winter snow amounts!


Date: Fri, 19 Feb 1999 08:26:47 -0600

From: “Brian/Jen Schmidt” brian_jen@prodigy.net

I have used Hobbs Thermore Ultra-Thin poly batting and the thinnest loft of Quilter’s Dream Cotton Batting. To me, they needled the same. However, I favor Quilter’s Dream Cotton because it ends up shrinking a little after I’ve washed the finished quilt, and I like the effect. But if I had to use a poly batting, it would be the Hobbs Thermore.

Jennifer

Can any of you say from hands-on experience that you’ve found one of these

cottons to quilt as easy as the thin poly-batts? Any “stories from the

field”

are welcome.

Thanks,

Carla,


Date: Fri, 19 Feb 1999 10:43:49 -0500

From: “J. G. Row” Judygrow@blast.net

To: “Quilt History List” QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: Two items

I’ve got two things to share with you today, both from newspapers.

  1. On page 3-A of the March issue of the Maine Antique Digest are two

small photos and accompanying short editorial. The photos are of a quilt

that is just a single large apple tree; one photo of the quilt itself (wish

I could see it in color) and one of the quilt as the cover of “Yankee”

Magazine.

The paragraph says that in August of 1998 M.A.D. took a picture of the apple

quilt in a dealer’s booth at the Union, Maine, antiques show. At the time

the dealer told them that the quilt was “probably” turn of the century and

signed by the maker, Polly Leavitt.

In January M.A.D. got a letter from Polly Leavitt with a picture of her

making the quilt in 1974. It was on the cover of “Yankee” in September of

that same year.

When M.A.D called the dealer, he said, “Nothing surprises me anymore.”

Right! Isn’t he supposed not to be surprised if he gives a prospective

buyer a description?

  1. New York Times, Thursday Feb 18, page F-11. There is a large

article/review by Phil Patton of the book “Hidden in Plain View” . This is

the first review or article about the book that I have read or seen that

finally casts doubt about the veracity of the facts as stated in the book.

Some quotes follow —

“Did Ms. Williams, who died last May, really present the code as a practical

aid? As recited, it seems more inspirational than navigational.”

“John Michael Vlach, chairman of African American studies at George

Washington University, reviewed an early proposal for the book for a rival

publisher and was not convinced. ‘ It’s a nice idea,’ he said, ‘ and it

would be marvelous if we could prove it. But from the evidence I don’t see

the smoking gun — or quilt.’ “

“Quilt codes are not mentioned in contemporaneous accounts of the

underground railroad, and the code doesn’t reach the systematic nature of,

say, the symbols scrawled on fences by tramps a century ago to set apart

friendly farms from hostile ones.”

” …. the Northern Star for guidance; the Drunkard’s Path pattern advised

taking an irregular course to avoid apprehension; Flying Geese signaled the

way north — but only in the spring. These are not exactly Rand Mc Nally

maps.”

“Designs for escape or designs for the dream of escape, the quilts raise

problems…………But to romanticize efforts to escape from slavery

underplays the hopelessness that made the institution so evil.”

And finally:

” The sad but likely truth is that for many, if not most, quilts were not

the escape map but the only escape.”

What a wonderful last line. As quilters we know that quilting does not show

us how to get OUT of unpleasant situations in our own lives. But we do know

that we can escape from those situations, even momentarily, INTO our

quilting.

Judy in Ringoes, NJ

judygrow@blast.net


Date: Fri, 19 Feb 1999 08:45:02 -0800

From: Marilyn Maddalena marilyn@crl.com

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: Re: NQA show

Message-Id: 3.0.3.32.19990219084502.006ed510@mail.crl.com

Content-Type: text/plain; charset=”us-ascii”

I am a Board member of NQA and Publications Chair, so I produce the

magazine, The Quilting Quarterly. I am not aware of any “flap” about

entering quilts in the NQA show. I think you may be thinking of Houston,

where I understand there were some problems with entries. The NQA show is

held annually at a different location each year, to ensure we reach the

most members possible. It is a non-juried show, and in my experience has

been great. It is a big show, with quite a variety of quilts to be seen

from all over the country, and great vendors — everything you’d like to

see in a quilt show. The magazine has an article about the show this year,

which is in Omaha, NE. If you’re not an NQA member, at a cost of $17.00

per year, you won’t be able to get the magazine — it’s sent only to

members. NQA is completely non-profit, has a program to certify teachers

and judges (where AQS has a program to certify appraisers), also gives

grants and lots of other “good stuff.” You might look into it. You can

call the office at 410-461-5733 for more information,


Date: Fri, 19 Feb 1999 12:29:19 EST

From: ZegrtQuilt@aol.com

For those of you in Florida and near Naples, I will be speaking at the Naples

Philharmonic on Monday, March 22 at 10 A.M. The title of the lecture is

American Quilts: A Patchwork of Meanings, Purposes, and Origins. It is part of

a series called The Tactile Series. Please contact the Philharmonic for

individual ticket prices. I would be pleased if some QHL folks could be

there. Shelly Zegart


Date: Fri, 19 Feb 1999 13:28:05 -0800

From: “pepper cory” pepcory@bmd.clis.com

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: Re: No flap with Houston–all settled

Message-Id: 199902191849.KAA22293@orbital.cue.com

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Friends, let’s get the facts straight before some misunderstanding happens

about the “quilt flap.” Last year AIQA (Houston organization) came out

with some guidelines for entry into their fall show that included a

prohibition against exhibiting the submitted quilt elsewhere. Perhaps this

was in response to some famous quilts that had been making the quilt show

circuit and AIQA wanted to ensure that new and different quilts were seen

at their show. However, in response to many letters and communications,

AIQA rescinded this prohibition. The jurying for that show took place much

later than usual because folks had to get their facts straight. I know this

to be true because I was one of the jurors along with Jane Hall and Linda

Feidler. Locked in a room with 500+ quilt slides–throw me into the briar

patch! If you have questions, please go to the source (AIQA). I was glad to

see Mary from NQA (another fine organization) getting information out.

Don’t worry–both AIQA and NQA hold fine shows as does AQS (Paducah).

Pepper Cory


Date: Fri, 19 Feb 1999 15:45:50 EST

From: Lekhbah@aol.com

Hi,

I am the mother of two equestrians, and the wife of another. Orvus is the

shampoo for horses. Mane and tail, as my daughters sniff, is just shampoo,

and is available for human heads. (they won’t use it on horses)

You can buy little bottles of Orvus at quilt stores, or big jugs of it at

tack/feed stores. We have to buy a halter this week-end, so I’ll check out

Maryland prices.

Kim


Date: Fri, 19 Feb 1999 22:47:54 -0000

From: “Jenni Dobson” jenni@dobson4qu.freeserve.co.uk

To: “Quilt History List” QHL@cuenet.com

Sorry I’m a few days late but I read Carla’s enquiry about quilting =

other batting compared to poly. I still have a cotton batting waiting =

for a hand project – I know cotton is popular with machine quilters & =

that’s what I’ve used it for, a limited amount.

Just wanted to say, I recently finished hand-quilting a double quilt =

with a wool (+ a small percent poly) batting (Hobbs). It was fantastic – =

so easy on the needle & the quilt feels lovely. If you want a natural =

fibre instead of polyester, you could try wool. It is light & fine, but =

warm yet not “sticky” to sleep under. I guess where you live in the US =

affects how useful wool is for you.

BTW, I’m not making a commercial plug here – just a satisfied user.

Jenni, in cloudy England.


Date: Fri, 19 Feb 99 21:45:23 EST

From: “Bob Mills” decision@tigger.jvnc.net

To: “Quilter’s Heritage List” QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: Repro fabric

Message-ID: decision.1269866363E@tigger.jvnc.net

Does anyone know if the repro fabric from the antique quilts and clothing at

the Shelburne Museum in VT is sold anywhere besides their museum shop and a

Shelburne Quilt shop? I bought two fat quarters there this summer, thinking

I could find it elsewhere. I would love to see a catalog with these

fabrics. Also, is Sharon Newman’s fabric line sold thru any catalogs? Who

is the manufacturer of this fabric?

The DAR quilt fabric line is sold in several catalogs but I was wondering if

anyone knew if there was a larger selection than appears in Hancock’s catalog.

I feel more comfortable knowing who designed the fabrics (Sharon) or from

what museum the fabrics were chosen. Much of the repro fabric in catalogs

is advertised as ‘based on’ or ‘inspired by’ quilts in a museum or

collection. My question becomes how closely was a fabric based on real

fabric? Even the DAR Museum Collection ad in Hancock’s catalog uses waffley

words like ‘are the inspiration for’.

Can someone explain the process as to how an antique textile fabric is

reproduced?

My other question for the experts is how reliable are the ‘reproductions’ to

reality? Why would they be called inspired by rather than an accurate

reproduction ?

Is there a graceful way of suggesting to QHL which of the designers seem to

have patterns and colors in line with the experts knowledge of fabrics?

Kaye England Voices of the Past, P & B DAR, Moda English Oak, Moda Secret

Garden, Moda Folk Art Wedding, Shelburne, and Sharon Newman’s Browns…

Part of the reason I ask is that if these are good repro’s I want to catalog

the pictures of the fabrics in my brain as well as in a notebook. If not, I

don’t want to look at them anymore.

And Eileen, J. G. Row and I were hopping up and down last night when we

found an exact match of fabric in your book to a quilt top I own. It is a

yellow with small red figures from 1830-60. If only your book was three

times the size!

Jan Drechsler (not Bob)

Date: Sat, 20 Feb 1999 11:10:00 +0100

From: “Tilde Binger” binger.hougaard@get2net.dk

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: Once more ? Hidden in Plain view.

Message-Id: 199902201010.LAA09404@bednorz.get2net.dk

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Now, I’m getting curious here. Can any of you ladies, who have actually read

this book (! “Hidden in Plain View”) tell me a little more about it. From

the review extracts that Judy sent, it seems, that the information of which

it is based, has been collected rather late in this century, and that

nothing exists from any Underground-users ? Is that correct ? Please e-mail

me privately, if this horse has been beaten to death on the list already.

Since the matter seems to have created quite a stir on other lists as well,

I would be interested in knowing exactly where the data for the book came

from, and when. I would also be interested in knowing, whether any material

from “Underground-users” has been published, and what this material says

about the Underground.

Thank you in advance

Tilde in Copenhagen

….

  1. New York Times, Thursday Feb 18, page F-11. There is a large

article/review by Phil Patton of the book “Hidden in Plain View” . This is

the first review or article about the book that I have read or seen that

finally casts doubt about the veracity of the facts as stated in the book.

…..

Judy in Ringoes, NJ

judygrow@blast.net


Date: Sat, 20 Feb 1999 06:29:40 -0500

From: Jean Ann quiltmag@mindspring.com

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: AIQA, NQA, AQA

Message-Id:

Content-Type: text/plain; charset=”us-ascii”

Well, for my two cents, I supported the decision of the (A)IQA to have only

quilts that had not been exhibited elsewhere. There are so many wonderful

quilts out there that it is good to see different quilts at the different

shows instead of quilts “making the rounds”. It made good sense, but public

opinion is also very important and I am sure that the people making both

decisions did so with great thoughtfulness and much consideration.

Jean Ann Eitel, Editor

QUILT magazine site: http://www.quiltmag.com – IRC chat site:

http://www.quilttalk.com

Personal web site: http://www.mindspring.com/~quiltmag/jeanann/jaeindex.html


Date: Sat, 20 Feb 1999 09:01:53 EST

From: EGinebaugh@aol.com

Hi All,

I need some opinions on a quilt I saw yesterday. It’s calling my name, but I

need more info on it before I buy.

It’s a single Irish Chain, made from that “creamsicle” orange & white. It has

very little batting, almost full-size, pretty worn on the edges, and a nickle-

sized hole on a side, about 2″ away from the edge. The quilting is a

crosshatch grid, with feathered wreaths in the open spaces of the chains, and

is exquisite! I love it for the quilting, but it is very fragile.

My questions are: About what year are we talking for this quilt? Can it be

displayed in any way? (I think hanging is out) Should it be repaired or

restored?

Any other input you have would be appreciated, and you may reply privately to

me if it is not of interest to the list.

Thank you for your input,

Liz in Michigan

EGinebaugh@aol.com


Date: Sat, 20 Feb 1999 09:31:44 EST

From: Jilly31@aol.com

Hi Everyone. I am a beginner here and my question is about humility blocks.

Do quilters still put them in their quilts? Many quilts I have seen at

auction or at quilt shows do not have them. If quilters don’t use them

anymore…when did they quit? Is this a useful way to help date a quilt?

Thanks for any input.

Jill —- In cold Indiana — If you don’t like the weather stick around —

it is bound to change in an hour or two. It was 70F one day and it snowed the

next day!


Date: Sat, 20 Feb 1999 09:44:47 EST

From: CToczek@aol.com

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: fabric repros

Message-ID: 440bb8cd.36ceca5f@aol.com

Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII

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Not an expert (yet!), but I can answer some of Jan’s questions regarding

the reproduction fabrics.

Having had the great opportunity to work at Sharon Newman’s shop for a year in

Lubbock, TX before the military moved us to New York, I can say first hand

that she’s an interesting lady with a head filled with facts and a temperament

for accuracy. (I learned quickly to measure through the center to avoid wavy

borders!) Sharon bases her repro collections on actual fabric pieces from

blocks, tops and quilts in her collection, plus some from friends and some

that Moda adds. Moda falls under United Notions Corp. out of Dallas.

By the way, Bobbie Aug and Sharon have a new book out this spring called

“String Quilts With Style,” a modern twist on an old favorite. Through AQS, I

think?

Back to repros……Some lines have an “accurate” coloring in say, reds and

greens, and then a modern update in blues and purple to attract a variety of

customers. Sharon is particular and tries to have ALL accurate colorings.

For instance, with the Vintage Garden line last fall, she was unhappy with the

blue colorway, (which I loved), because “it wasn’t right” for the period, but

lost out to the Moda folks on the decision. As for the production methods, I

don’t know the technicalities, but do know samples are sent numerous times

from the plants to the designers for adjustments.

Hope that helps a little; hopefully we’ll hear more from the experienced folks

about the process involved in the fabric lines.

Oh, and a teaser….Sharon has a red and green reproduction line in the works

for later this year!

Have a nice weekend,

Carla Toczek


Date: Sat, 20 Feb 1999 09:12:26 +0000

From: Bobbie Aug qwltpro@uswest.net

To: Jilly31@aol.com

CC: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: Re: QHL: Re: QHL-Digest Digest V99 #49

Message-ID: 36CE7C7A.B6F0CF06@clsp.uswest.net

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Dear Jilly,

By humility blocks are you speaking of the purposeful practice of making a

“mistake” in one’s quilt top? The “Devil’s Eye” to allow a place for the “evil

spirits” to escape the quilt? The belief that to make something perfect would be

evil – only God made perfect things? If this is your meaning, then I would say to

you that there has never been any conclusive evidence shown in any research that I

or anyone else has ever done that supports any of the above as being an

intentional practice – at least as it would apply to any formal time period or

group of people. In other words, one individual quiltmaker may have done this

throughout her lifetime of making quilts, but this does not constitute a

“practice.” Too bad as it is such a romantic idea!

Bobbie A. Aug

Jilly31@aol.com wrote:

Hi Everyone. I am a beginner here and my question is about humility blocks.

Do quilters still put them in their quilts? Many quilts I have seen at

auction or at quilt shows do not have them. If quilters don’t use them

anymore…when did they quit? Is this a useful way to help date a quilt?

>

Thanks for any input.

Jill —- In cold Indiana — If you don’t like the weather stick around —

it is bound to change in an hour or two. It was 70F one day and it snowed the

next day!


Date: Sat, 20 Feb 1999 10:21:01 -0700

From: “jenniferl hill” hilljl@shaw.wave.ca

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Cc: Re:

Subject: QHL: Re: QHL-Digest Digest V99 #49

Message-Id:

Content-Type: text/plain; charset=”us-ascii”

I guess the horsey set hereabouts have deeper pockets than quilters, or

maybe they just seldom wash their horses. I went to a local tack shop

seeking Orvis or even an Orvis-like product in large quantities. I was

told it was a special order, and the price quoted was more than the local

quilt shops charge for the little 8 oz. bottle. Go figure.

Jennifer Hill

Calgary, AB


Date: Sat, 20 Feb 1999 12:20:25 EST

From: KirkColl@aol.com

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: Re: Repro fabrics and Omaha

Message-ID: fef379da.36ceeed9@aol.com

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Two things to comment on:

1) I hope everyone can come to Omaha in June for the NQA Show. The local

committee is knocking themselves out to make it the best NQA show ever. In

addition to the main show, there are 28 other special events and exhibits

around town at the various museums and historica houses including patriotic

quilts at the Strategic Air Command Museum.

The Quilt Heritage Foundation is coordinating the appraisals and offering

lectures across the street at Trinity Cathedral in a “Quilt Heritage Days”

celebration. We’ll be doing two lectures a day on “Taking Care of Grandma’s

Quilt,” “What’s My Quilt Worth?” and “Tell Me About Grandmother’s Quilt”.

The last is kind of like super show and tell with a lecturer commenting on

each quilt.

On Friday night, everyone is invited over to our shop for a party (and

shopping of course). We’ll have free trolley rides from the Doubletree up til

about midnight.

The other big news is NQA has established a new category for Crazy Quilts this

year — the first big national show to do so. (Yeah!)

  1. On reproduction fabrics. The surface design on most of the reproductions

on the market today is great, because it is all done with computers and they

can get it very accurate. Sometimes the companies take liberties with the

sizing however.

The colors, on the other hand, are a different story. In some lines, all the

colors are taken from fabrics of the period. This was true of Harriet

Hargrave’s first collection from P&B. Two pieces (the light cadet blues) were

taken from faded fabrics, but otherwise they were dead on. I remember Harriet

was in the shop the day after she got the strike offs and showed them to me

and I was on the phone ordering them before her car pulled away from the curb.

Some other companies take only the design and don’t worry at all about the

color — they just go with 1990’s colors so they fit in with the rest of their

line.

Many are now going to a plan of one fairly accurate original colorway, and two

or more alternate colorways that probably are based in contemporary colors

rather than original ones.

Remember, their business is to sell fabric, and there are many fewer quilters

wanting to re-create older quilts, than contemporary quilters wanting to make

new quilts.

The minimum run of a given print is 3000 yards with a minimum of 1000 yards

in each color — if you print in Japan. If you print in the the U.S., the

minimums go up to 7500 yards of one print, with a minimum 3000 yards in one

color.

That’s why many of the companies sell the fabric at market from painting and

color copies before they even print the fabric. Then they don’t even print

what doesn’t sell well — and if that was the original colorway — sorry.

A few companies are finding that color accurate reproductions are selling

better than “kind of close” reproductions, and are trying to do a really good

job with at least one color way.

Some retail businesses sell all the “reproduction” fabrics that come out. We

decided to focus on the ones we felt were accurate for both color and surface

design. But there are still some good ones out there we miss. Usually we

pass because those particular companies don’t stock the fabric and you can’t

reorder with any certainty. Because we’re primarily mail order, we need

reliable supplies.

It’s a fascinating business, and there are lots of factors that come into

play. It certainly makes sense for appraisers and quilt historians to try to

keep up with the repro market because some of them are very, very good and in

100 years it will be hard to date the quilts if they are quilted with

traditional cotton batts and thread that doesn’t flouresce.

Right now we don’t worry about counterfeiting because it costs so much more to

make a new quilt than the buy an equivalent old quilt.

Thanks for the forum.

Nancy Kirk

The Kirk Collection

www.kirkcollection.com


Date: Sat, 20 Feb 1999 11:46:27 +0000

From: Bobbie Aug qwltpro@uswest.net

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Nancy, thanks for the repro information.

Please tell us who is the Quilt Heritage Foundation. How does one become a

member. Who will be doing quilt appraisals. The lecture titles sound great! Who

is giving which lecture?

Thank you.

Bobbie A. Aug


Date: Sat, 20 Feb 1999 18:26:55 EST

From: Jilly31@aol.com

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: humility block & display ideas

Message-ID: 1591c4e3.36cf44bf@aol.com

Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII

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In a message dated 2/20/99 11:22:51 AM US Eastern Standard Time,

qwltpro@uswest.net writes:

<< In other words, one individual quiltmaker may have done this

throughout her lifetime of making quilts, but this does not constitute a

“practice.” Too bad as it is such a romantic idea! >>

Thanks for the input. I am really sorry to hear that this isn’t or wasn’t a

“practice” of a particular period of time or a group of people. Personally, I

like the idea…it is a romantic idea! I have seen on samplers where the

maker cross-stitches the letter Z backwards so as not to offend God by making

a perfect piece and have thought the practice might carry over to quilting.

I have a Rose of Sharon quilt which is quite old and I am having difficulties

trying to date it. Anyway, the quilt has what I would call a humility block

in the lower right hand side of the quilt. The “mistake on purpose” is that

the flowers are a totally different color than the rest of the quilt. It

looks quite purposeful that the colors are different. Any ideas on this?

Also, I am sure this topic has been discussed before…but what is the best

way to fold and store quilts. Also any display ideas out there?

Jill in Indiana – and it is snowing again!


Date: Sat, 20 Feb 1999 23:07:13 EST
From: EllynLK@aol.com
I have been pulling out all of the antique “orphan” blocks that I’ve inherited
or found… just wondering what others of you have done to display these.
I’m going to be doing some redecorating in the spring and want to use these in
my decor. Just want to know what good ideas are out there to use these little
treasures in new and different ways.
Found one I forgot I had… found it a few years ago at a flea market. I
have no idea what pattern it is but I bought it because it has three paper
template pieces pinned to it. They were cut from an envelope and as fortune
would have it, there is a postmark! November 26, 1928 at 4:30 p.m. I would
like to somehow display this block along with the templates.
Ideas welcome!
Lauri Klobas

Pacific PaKarendes, California

Date: Sat, 20 Feb 1999 22:16:46 -0700
From: Eileen Trestain ejtrestain@earthlink.net

OKAY folks. I just can’t bite my tongue any more.
I bought the underground RR book, Hidden in Plain View. First, I have to
say up front that I believe in the likelihood that an Underground RR may
have used quilts in some manner to give directions, or memorize the way,
similar to a map. I bought the book believing this to be a possibility.
I believe the African American culture is/was wise in many more ways
that anyone ever gave them credit for at the time, and that their
resiliency of spirit is what helped them to survive in the most
appalling of conditions.
Now to the book itself. The original author of the book, Jaqueline
Tobin, met an African American woman selling quilts in a flea market in
South Carolina, and the woman hinted at the Underground RR legend, which

has been with us for years. Leaving aside the possibility that this
could have been a most delightful ploy for an elderly woman to sell her
quilts to a tourist, we assume she has told them an oral legend handed
down that nobody so far has been able to prove.
For the first 63 pages, we get to read the forward by not one, but three
people who I presume are well known for their knowledge of African

American history and African tribal history, as well as introductions by
both authors. One of these people is Cuesta Benberry, a highly respected
quilt historian.
Much of the first portion of the book itself is about African tribal
arts and history. The book makes a point that the African American

community has a long history of oral traditions. I understand that,
too. But every time I felt that approached the subject the book was
supposed to be about in the first half of the book, I felt like they
dodged, and danced, and never quite reached the subject I was interested
in.. the quilts.
the authors give a grouping of quilt blocks which the woman named as the
blocks that were used. Then they take us on a convoluted journey of how
they decided what the blocks may have meant in use. One of the ideas
which they have put forward was the Dresden plate pattern symbolizing a
town of Dresden Ohio. Does anyone know of any recorded history of the
pattern named as Dresden Plate in the 1800’s? Yes, the pattern existed

in c.1800 medallion quilts, where it is now named in England as a
Dahlia, but can anyone tell me how old the Dresden Plate name is? Yes,
Wagon Wheel patterns were in use. Why would the Wheel pattern lead them
to Dresden, Ohio?
Next, we come to how old spiritual songs relate to underground railroad
themes. And about the representational pictorial quilts of Harriet
Powers. But, so far, I fail to see a great relation to proving the
underground RR theme.
Now, to a more telling part, in my estimation. The photographs. Many of
the photographs are recently made quilts, made by the second author,

Raymond Dobard. Staged in scenic positions in old slave quarters, but
in bright modern colors, the quilts do stand out. However, it is the
quilts which are supposedly slave quilts, one which was “a exceptional
example of an early log cabin quilt that was made by a fugitive slave in
the 1840’s….” Though a terrible photo supplied by the museum, it
appears to be a classic C.1880 black silk quilt with considerable
damage. On the next page is another log cabin quilt which “is said to be
slave made. The date is given as 1830’s by it’s owner.” Here we have a
c.1830 quilt, complete with a nice strip of mourning print right up the
middle, at the front of the picture? It looks to me like a classic
c.1900 log cabin utility quilt, with a baptist fan quilt pattern
overall, and possibly a moderately thick to very thick batting, common

at that time. Even relative novices I have asked, out of curiosity, and
without leading the witness, as it were, have responded when asked “When
was this quilt made?” have said without hesitation “Turn of the
Century.”
A few pages later, we have a quilt, admittedly made in 1980, from the
MEMORY of a quilt owned by the maker in her childhood, but which was
destroyed by a fire. It features stars in a random pattern, and an
unusual quilting design, with some colored threads as some of the

quilting. This is supposed to be the topographical map of an unnamed
plantation, where the maker, who is still living, quite obviously never
lived during the years of slave incarceration.
On the following page, we have a quilt made by the Daughters Of Dorcas,
an African American Quilters Guild. This quilt was made in 1987-88, and
features several of the patterns listed by the elderly woman. (but who
DIDN’t use those same patterns in the 1980’s for their sampler quilts?)
It is convenient for the authors that the African American quilt maker,
Ozella Williams, passed away last fall, as there is no one left to
further question by any other person who might be interested, or who may
have been more through in their research. If I, at first glance, can
shoot holes in the dates of the quilts they tell us are very early
examples of Log cabin quilts, and this is what kind of knowledge and
research they have built their story around, it makes the rest of the
book look pretty shoddy.
I personally had hoped for some definite proof, or at least a decent
jumping off place. The best part of the book, in my opinion, is the
extensive bibliography on underground RR articles and books which we
find at the back of their book. If you want to know more about the
Underground RR, use that list. If you want to know about quilts from
the underground RR, this isn’t going to help you much.
Just my very personal opinion of this much discussed book.

Eileen

Date: Sat, 20 Feb 1999 22:29:23 -0700
From: Eileen Trestain ejtrestain@earthlink.net

I guess I am on a soap box tonight.
There are a couple things to consider other than ease of quilting in
choosing battings.
Cotton and wool battings have a long history of survival. Polyester
doesn’t.
Cotton and Wool are very breathable, and are not so likely to trap
moisture under the quilt, so they feel cooler in the summer and warmer
in teh winter.
Wool and cotton are somewhat fire resistant, wool more than cotton. If
you see a burned quilt with a poly batting, you will never forget the
sight of how it burned , and melted. There is nothig quite like the
feel and sound of a smoked poly batting, which melts between the layers
of cotton top and lining, and crinkles and crackles as you handle it.
Rather eerie whan you think somebody might have been sleeping under it
as it melted.
I like Mountain Mist Blue Ribbon, probably because grandma would never
use anything else, and I like that traditional feel, and Hobbs Organic
if I want a bit more loft. I like way Hobbs wool feels, but I am afraid
to handle it too long, as I am allergic to wool, and don’t want to take
teh chance. I don’t quilt with it.
Eileen
Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 11:33:32 -0500
From: Nancy Roberts <robertsn@norwich.net

For those interested in how reproduction fabric lines are designed, you might
check out Chiori Santiago’s article on the topic in The Fabric Special
Showcase, a special issue of Traditional Quiltworks magazine from Chitra
Publications. The article covers P&B Textile’s collection based on quilts
from the Oakland Museum. This issue is no longer on the newsstands, but back
issues can be purchased from the publisher if you missed it. The website is
http://www.QuiltTownUSA.com/ or you can call a credit card order at

800-628-8244. Nancy

Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 11:43:21 -0500
From: Alan Kelchner <quiltfix@mail.jax.bellsouth.net

Liz, I have only one suggestion about your quilt – if it is something
that you dearly love, cannot stand the thought of not owning, you feel
the price is reasonable and you can afford it, then run (not walk) back
to the store and get the silly thing before someone else falls in
love!!!! I missed out on one (at that point too chicken to bid on ebay)
that I wish I had bought. Can’t get it out of my mind. But OTOH, if
it’s not screaming to come home, I won’t buy it. So I buy very few any
more. Would rather buy something that wants to come home with me. And
this does not mean that they are fancy and expensive. That is not
requisite. My most favorite one is a utilitarian piece that is worn (it
was filler for another, very ugly top). As for date, it’s not fair to
ask online (whimper-chinquiver). We have to see it. I will stick my neck
out far enough to guess at depression era, but that is not definite.
My suggestion is to buy and take it home. Love it as is, folded over a
chair that is infrequently used, so you can look at it. And never on
the couch – someone will inevitably snuggle under it. One of my first
jobs came from such an incident. The ladies daughter got under it and
was re-arranging the portion over her legs with her foot (don’t we all
before we sit up and use our hands?). Anyhow, the quilt was a fragile
pieceand, sure enough, her foot went straight through the center! It was
easily repaired, and (brag, brag) I couldn’t find the repair easily

myself (someone caught me photographing the wrong place – oops).

Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 11:56:07 -0500
From: Alan Kelchner <quiltfix@mail.jax.bellsouth.net

Someone may need to help me here – memory must be going. Watched
television the other night and my interest was piqued when the narrator
was talking about how these (3rd world men) would not make their (item)
perfect, as only Mohammed was perfect. This was on Discovery/TLC, and I
meant to remember everything, but …………
Wait, just remembered – It was PBS, “Antiques Roadshow”, and whichever
middle-eastern tribe had woven the rug they were appraising (the rug was
HUGE). The man appraising stated that they wouldn’t use matching dye
lots of yarn to create the piece, because only Mohammed was perfect and
capable of making perfection. And as the years went on, the dye lots
would fade differently, making the differences even more noticeable (the
rug in question had blue sections that were two different shades of the
same color). Of course, the flags went up in my brain because of the
connection to humility blocks in American quilts. I still think that the
original humility myths were to cover mistakes, but I also believe that
the romanticism of the legend led people to do this on purpose.
Now if I could remember the name of the woman I ran into last week. Used
to work with her, can remember the day she came in beaming because her
bosom looked bigger (new Wonder Bra), but it’s been a week and I’ll be
damned if I can remember her name! Must be a guy thing to remember her
chest and not her name (LOL) !

Alan

Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 13:27:36 EST
From: QuiltEvals@aol.com
To: QHL@cuenet.com
Subject: QHL: Re: Questi

In a message dated 2/20/99 6:51:25 PM Pacific Standard Time, QHL-Digest-
request@cuenet.com writes:
<<
Please tell us who is the Quilt Heritage Foundation. How does one become a
member. Who will be doing quilt appraisals. The lecture titles sound great!
Who
is giving which lecture?
Thank you.
Bobbie A. Aug

>
Yes, Nancy, I am curious about this as well?
Thanks,

Deborah Roberts

Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 11:27:40 -0700
From: “Jeanne.Fetzer” <Jeanne.Fetzer@integrityonline3.com

Thank you for taking the time to point out where you question the
authenticity of the Dobard book. All I want to say is, “Amen.” I don’t say
that to disprove anything, but to echo the need to look at information and
then ask questions. If we want quilt history to be taken seriously, we must
carefully research and support our findings based on fact.
Thank you, thank you!

Jeanne Fetzer

Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 13:36:17 EST
From: QuiltEvals@aol.com

Yesterday, I had the privilege of seeing the strike offs for a new “1840’s”
line by Pat Nickols….Pat, I hope it was okay to tell, I just had to share
the news. The line is exciting….very accurate in detail and color. Of
course, there are the original colors and added color ways as well, but they
are all WONDERFUL! We were able to compare a few of the original fabrics
to the repros. Pat, like Sharon Newman has taken actual prints from quilts
and fabrics in her collection. This seems to be the way to do it – at least
for these two. The line is being produced by P&B and should be available in
late Spring, Pat will be introducing it at Quilt Market this May.
Sorry, I don’t usually do this, and I don’t mean to sound like a commercial,
but when you see them you will understand my excitement.
Deborah Roberts

Costa Mesa, CA

Date: Sun, 21 Feb 99 16:22:48 EST
From: “Bob Mills” <decision@tigger.jvnc.net

To Jennifer and others:
In the East, Agway which is a retail store and nursery catering to area
farmers and yuppies, sells Orvus and it is not special order.
I just bought a container of 7 1/2 pounds for $19.95 and my quilt store
orvis is 8 oz. for $4.99. You need to find something like a feedstore or
farmers co-op. I live in a very suburban area of NJ but am lucky we still
have these stores. And my quilts are getting very clean.
About a year or so ago I went into Agway and was told they were sold out.
Mrs. G. is washing all her sheep this week!
Jan Drechsler (not Bob)

http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/bobmills/jan.html

Date: Sun, 21 Feb 99 16:22:47 EST
From: “Bob Mills” <decision@tigger.jvnc.net

Just a word of thanks on the repro fabric information. Already I have
learned a lot!
Jan Drechsler (not Bob)

http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/bobmills/jan.html

Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 16:34:18 EST
From: Kathi2174@aol.com

Alan,
I did get to see wool yarn being dyed in the bazaar in Herat, Afghanistan in

  1. I’m sure the methods had not changed in centuries. The term for the
    streakiness in the color is “abrash.” It is a word of Turkish origin, that
    originally meant the dappled or speckled colors on horses. It has long been
    used to refer to the variation in saturation/hue in yarns used to weave rugs.
    It’s caused in two ways: 1. By crude (not bad, just primitive) technology
    used by dyers doing up a single batch. The second is by reusing the dye-bath.
    The second and third uses have less pigment, therefore give varying shades.
    Not much to do with quilts, is it? Unless we relate the “use what you have “
    concept to explain variations in techniques in stead of the romantic lack of
    perfection notion.
    Off the soap box!
    Kathi in Calif.

Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 15:21:09 -0800
From: “Christine Thresh” <christine@winnowing.com

Tilde’s post asked for input from those who read the book, Hidden in Plain
View.

I read the book and was disappointed. The story told by the old African
American woman was interesting, but the book did nothing to really back it
up. There were lots of references to African textiles and Masonic symbols,
but they did not seem to tie in with the story told by the quilter. The
books I own about quilting patterns led me to believe many of the patterns
she said were in the quilt “map” were not in usage at the time of the
Underground Railroad. The author of Hidden stated that she obtained the
information
from the quilter in one three hour session.
Christine Thresh
http://www.winnowing.com
Christine Thresh

http://www.winnowing.com/

Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 20:00:30 -0500 (EST)
From: JOCELYNM@delphi.com

On 20-FEB-1999 21:53:29.5 QHL said to JOCELYNM

Well, for my two cents, I supported the decision of the (A)IQA to
have only quilts that had not been exhibited elsewhere. There are so
many wonderful quilts out there that it is good to see different
quilts at the different shows instead of quilts “making the rounds”.
Jean Ann,
It was my understanding, however, that this rule applied to things like
entering our quilts in our local quilt shows, the county fair, etc. The talk
here was how it was going to ‘dumb down’ local shows, if the very best
quilters held out their work for the big shows…plus, if a quilt could only
be shown once, that seems like a shame!
OTOH, I really hate to go to a show and see things I’ve seen before. So
I don’t know what the happy balance is…
seen on samplers where the maker cross-stitches the letter Z backwards
so as not to offend God by making a perfect piece and have thought the
practice might carry over to quilting.
Jill,
I once spoke with a ‘plain’ quilter who said that it would be an
affront to God to deliberately put in a mistake, because that would mean you
thought you HAD achieved perfection up to that point! I don’t know if
that were the teachings of her sect, or her personal opinion, though.
Anyway, the quilt has what I would call a humility block in the lower
right hand side of the quilt. The “mistake on purpose” is that the
flowers are a totally different color than the rest of the quilt. It
This may be that the quilter ran out of fabric, and used a scrap of
another fabric that, at the time, matched, but over the years the dyes have
aged differently. I have a turn of the century Carolina Lily where the
majority of the red flowers are now brown (fading of turkey red dyes,
presumably). Among the blocks that are still red, are several different
shades of red, leading me to believe the quilter was making do with whatever
red scraps she could find.

Jocelyn

Hello,
I am Sharon Newman, and all of the fabrics I have reproduced for Moda
have been taken from real fabrics. Some are in Eileen’s book. My Vintage
Garden swag is shown there. The whole line of Vintage Garden was taken
from one quilt that had multiple color ways of the prints and two prints
not in the quilt. My Cherished Pieces fabrics were done with fabrics in
my dating fabrics box. My Twenties Treasures were taken from a 1923 Iowa
Irish Chain and a hexagon oddfellow top. My Turn of the Century fabrics
are from some of my grandmothers quilts. I have seen my fabrics in Nancy
Martin’s Two Color Quilts book. Eleanor Burns used my fabrics in her
Stockings book. You will see my fabrics used in several books.
Sharon Newman

Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 19:23:08 -0800
From: Marilyn Maddalena marilyn@crl.com

Eileen, thank you so much for your thoughtful and intelligent insights into
the UGRR book, and for taking the time to set them out so clearly so those
of us who are still novices can learn from you. You put in words just what
I had been thinking, but hadn’t taken the time to completely analyze yet. I
do think it’s an interesting book, I’m glad I bought it and read it, and it
has added to my knowledge — (as does everything I read in one way or
another) but I sure don’t want to take it as the gospel truth. Last night
on the History Channel was a very lengthy program on the UGRR — unless I
fell asleep in the middle, or was distracted by chocolate(!), there was not
one mention of quilts in the entire program. I kept waiting for it — and
thought it quite odd that such a lengthy program, obviously thoroughly
researched by experts — would not even mention signals by use of quilts,
or maps, or anything else about quilts. The only mention was of a lantern
in the window of safe houses. Wonder if the authors of the Hidden in
Plain View book knew of this program — and which one is accurate? Anyone
else see it and wonder, too? Marilyn in Sacramento


Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 21:05:55 -0800
From: Audrey Waite awquiltr@sedona.net
To: QHL@cuenet.com
Subject: QHL: Dating Fabrics
Message-ID: 36D0E5B3.7D26@sedona.net
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
For those interested in learning more about dating antique quilts
through patterns and fabric, our own Eileen Trestain will be teaching a
class called “Dating and Heavy Petting” at Quilt Camp in the Pines,
Saturday, July 24, 1999. Send a SASE for the complete schedule to:
Quilt Camp in the Pines, 160 Sugar Loaf Drive, Sedona, AZ 86336.
Eventually we will have the class schedule on-line at:
http://www.quiltcamp.com
If you’ve never been to a quilter’s retreat or similar outing, you’re
really missing a treat!

Audrey Waite

Eileen, thank you for your insightful post about the book, “Hidden In Plain View.” I am so afraid that with all the hype and publicity this book has been getting, a legend of truth will grow up around it that no person with any real knowledge will be able to shake loose. I also am afraid that any learned rebuttals and/or refutations of their thesis will be seen as racist by many of the defenders of the authors. Judy in Ringoes, NJ judygrow@blast.net

! ——————————

Date: Mon, 22 Feb 1999 07:59:37 -0500 From: Barb Garrett<BGARRETT@FAST.NET To: QHL@cuenet.com Subject: QHL: Re – Marilyn Kowaleski Message-ID: 36D154B9.F4E878A@fast.net Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

To Judy and others – Marilyn Kowaleski owns a very high scale antique co-op on route 272 in Adamstown, PA, named South Pointe Antiques, just south of the Turnpike entrance. The shop has absolutely beautiful things, not just textiles, and there are always wonderful quilts displayed on the walls above the showcases. It is a showcase co-op, and they are very friendly. I go and look as often as possible — it’s like visiting a wonderful museum. Marilyn has been a fabric and textile collector for many years — back when things were cheap — and she just accumulated them. I don’t know that she actively collects now. Each March she holds a vintage fabrics and textiles show and sale at the co-op — which includes things from her collection and things from the other dealers in the co-op. This year’s begins March 4.

I went last year and the things were truly beautiful to look at. I asked last year and they said they continually replace things that are sold, and suggest coming several times during March as new things come out. I know this is at least the 3rd year she has had the show, but it could be longer. As to whether it is worth coming — that’s a personal thing. I live 30 minutes from there, so enjoy looking and hope to go this year. The quality of the items is very, very good, the prices what one would expect for top quality from a dealer who knows what she has. She also has unusual, one of a kind things — pot holders, pin cushions, all kinds of smalls. The shop is closed on Tuesdays If anyone has more questions, please ask and I can look for my literature with hours, etc. Barb in southeastern PA<BGARRETT@FAST.NET


Date: Mon, 22 Feb 1999 08:17:28 -0500 From: “jawhite@courant.infi.net”<JAWHITE@COURANT.INFI.NET To: Quilt History list<QHL@CUENET.COM Subject: QHL: Hidden in Plain View Message-ID: 36D158C5.34F9@courant.infi.net Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

I wasn’t going to say anything, but since the subject has been opened, I agree 100% about this book. My main question about this book is: why did Ozella Williams feel the need to tell a perfect stranger, someone she had never laid eyes on before, about this quilt code after all these years? If this is something that has been handed down orally in families, you’d think we would have heard about by now. The authors didn’t back up the book with enough research. While there is an extensive bibliography listed in the back of the book, there were statements made (supposedly statements of fact) within the book itself that were never attributed to anyone or any research. If you are going to state something as true fact, it must be backed up with research. The bibliography is quite extensive (and very interesting) for such a small book. I also think that there were no directions obtained from the suggested quilt patterns/quilts that couldn’t have been obtained from observing the night sky at the time. Dr. Gladys Marie Fry wrote an excellent monograph on Harriet Powers; yet this was never mentioned. I was left with the feeling that the authors were trying really hard to force a point and just didn’t quite make it. I’m not saying the premise isn’t true – I am saying that much more good research needs to be done. Judy White – Ct


Date: Mon, 22 Feb 1999 10:10:11 EST From: JQuilt@aol.com To: qhl@cuenet.com Subject: QHL: “history” Message-ID: 921ae6d2.36d17353@aol.com Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit

More and more we have come to realize how much of “History” is biased opinion…very little or none was ever written about the African American roles in American history…in the military, in the world of inventions and education….but to overcompensate by printing more fictionalized history..is not the answer… The freeing and rescuing of slaves came about because of Abolitionist activists….not by quilts hanging on fences…and to tell the descendents of slaves that it was anything else..does not do anything to help them understand the underground RR movement… when I first heard about the review of “Hidden in Plain Sight”, in USA Today… stating that an old African American women chose a quilt customer to tell all of this “valuable” information…I wrote to QHL saying it had the taint of hoax about it… I know that racism runs rampant in this country and History has always short changed the minorities living in this country…. But “pretend” history is not the answer… jean jquilt@aol.com

—————————— —————————— Date: Mon, 22 Feb 1999 10:37:35 -0600 From: Laura Hobby Syler<TEXAS_QUILT.CO@MAIL.AIRMAIL.NET To: JQuilt@aol.com, qhl@cuenet.com Subject: Re: QHL: “history” Message-Id: 3.0.3.32.19990222103735.006dd00c@mail.airmail.net Content-Type: text/plain; charset=”us-ascii” Jean, and all, You know, I’ve been suspicious of this since I first saw “The Good Dr.” on Oprah….and expressed those views. But what is truely sad, and makes me a little mad, is that we all have bought the book hoping to get more information and at least I for one feel like I was taken to the cleaners!! Almost like that “Instant Expert” book on antique quilts that came out last year……… Laura In chilly N. Texas

At 10:10 AM 2/22/99 EST, JQuilt@aol.com wrote: >More and more we have come to realize how much of “History” is biased >opinion…very little or none was ever written about the African American >roles in American history…in the military, in the world of inventions and >education….but to overcompensate by printing more fictionalized history..is >not the answer… > >The freeing and rescuing of slaves came about because of Abolitionist >activists….not by quilts hanging on fences…and to tell the descendents of >slaves that it was anything else..does not do anything to help them understand >the underground RR movement… >when I first heard about the review of “Hidden in Plain Sight”, in USA >Today… stating that an old African American women chose a quilt customer to >tell all of this “valuable” information…I wrote to QHL saying it had the >taint of hoax about it… >I know that racism runs rampant in this country and History has always short >changed the minorities living in this country…. >But “pretend” history is not the answer… >jean >jquilt@aol.com > > > ——————————

Date: Mon, 22 Feb 1999 11:44:29 EST From: WileneSmth@aol.com To: QHL@cuenet.com Subject: QHL: 1830s LC quilt in Tobin & Dobard Message-ID:<AE922D6F.36D1896D@AOL.COM Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit <<

However, it is the quilts which are supposedly slave quilts, one which was “a exceptional example of an early log cabin quilt that was made by a fugitive slave in the 1840’s….” Though a terrible photo supplied by the museum, it appears to be a classic C.1880 black silk quilt with considerable damage. On the next page is another log cabin quilt which “is said to be slave made. The date is given as 1830’s by it’s owner.” Here we have a c.1830 quilt, complete with a nice strip of mourning print right up the middle, at the front of the picture? It looks to me like a classic c.1900 log cabin utility quilt, with a baptist fan quilt pattern overall, and possibly a moderately thick to very thick batting, common at that time. Even relative novices I have asked, out of curiosity, and without leading the witness, as it were, have responded when asked “When was this quilt made?” have said without hesitation “Turn of the Century.” >>

I’ve been hoping that someone else would notice (and question) the 1830s Log Cabin quilt in Hidden in Plain View because I wanted to see if others echoed my dating of it. Yes, I, too, immediately dated that quilt at ca. 1900-1910. It’s fabrics are one of the common palettes of that time — cotton calicos of whites (shirting prints), light indigo blues, mourning grays, and wines. While I learned not long ago that a similar light indigo blue existed in the 1820s (I’d love to share my story about those if anyone is interested), but it apparently was not widely used. The wine color did not, as far as I’ve discovered, exist until around the last quarter of the 19th century, and I believe the grays began around the same time, though they could date a tad earlier. And I’ve yet to see that fan quilting pattern in a quilt that was made prior to the end of the 19th century, and it was extremely popular for utilitarian quilts early in the 20th century. But my critique of that particular quilt is not limited to Jackie and Raymond’s book, as I have long criticized not one, but many of the quilts illustrated by Gladys-Marie Fry in Stitched from the Soul: Slave Quilts from the Ante-Bellum South (NYC: Dutton Studio Books, 1990).

Six quilts are pictured on pages 18-20 (Plates 21-26) with the caption: “These six quilts are said to have been made by ‘sewing women’ — slaves that were specially trained to do quilting.” #21 is a broderie perse so DOES date to slavery days. #22 is “ify” to a date — it’s either 2nd half 19th century or 1st half 20th century. #24 is definitely 19th century (lots of well-worn brown calicos), but a closer date is not possible from that photograph. #26 is a whole cloth quilt which is undateable from this photograph. But #23 and #25 are 20th century and MADE from 1920s-1930s prints, so can’t possibly be “slave made” for obvious reasons. Made by “former slaves,” yes. #23 is a Grandmother’s Flower Garden in the common configuration of two rows of hexagons around the center hexagon, the pieces are typically large, and the prints used are typical 1920s-1930s. #25 is a pattern first published May 1921 in Woman’s World magazine (Chicago) as “Cracker,” then repeated as a Four Patch in this quilt. (This is not to say the design did not “exist” prior to 1921, just that 1921 is the earliest publication date presently known.)

The next quilt, a two-color Lone Star top, Plate 27, is also said to be “slave-made,” but I question it, too. Plate 31 (p.22) is an embroidered crazy quilt, mostly wools, said to have been started by a house slave before the Civil War and finished by her daughter in 1895. And there are still more obviously 20th century quilts on pp. 40-41 with the caption: “These three quilts made by slave Nancy Vaughn Ford are important, for they are good examples of the utilitarian quilts made by slaves for their own use in their free time.” The first one, #56, dates ca. 1880-1910. #57 incorporates a printed fabric of giant pastel hearts with large words between them and likely a 1950s fabric. #58 needs no further comment here. #61 is pieced goblet blocks and it is unlikely that pieced picture blocks existed until after the Civil War. I also question #110, #111, and #114, all attributed to a woman “imported from the Congo in 1818” when she was 12 or 13 years old. All three appear to be early 20th century.

In discussing Jackie and Raymond’s book, we are doing exactly what Raymond suggested in his Author’s Note on page 33: “Our interpretation of the code is based in part upon informed conjecture. While we believe that our research and the piecing together of our findings present a strong viable case, we do not claim that our ‘deciphering’ of the code is infallible. Nor do we insist that our perspective is the only one for viewing the code. We have written the book in a way that encourages questions. We leave room for the reader to add her/his own ideas and thereby contribute to the growing body of knowledge. In the spirit of quiltmaking, we invite you to join us in juxtaposing ideas so that patterns and meanings are revealed.” And that is exactly what we are doing here on QHL, albeit rather harshly at times. Jackie and Raymond are to be applauded, in my view, for bringing this idea to us “in Plain View.” I’ll climb down off my soap box now, and Thanks for listening. –Wilene


Date: Mon, 22 Feb 1999 10:46:20 -0600 From: Laura Hobby Syler3.0.3.32.19990222104620.006e15f0@mail.airmail.net Content-Type: text/plain; charset=”us-ascii” Shelly, do you remember the conversations that we had last year about the “black centered Log Cabins”? There is some documentation back to King Tut’s tomb with one of the golden cat idols wrapped in cloth strips that formed a log cabin design…….I think that Karen Evans also gave us some art history background???? But I do know that the pattern became popular during Lincoln’s presidency and there after… Laura At 11:15 AM 2/22/99 EST, ZegrtQuilt@aol.com wrote: >I am curious as to when you all think the log cabin pattern developed. This >is in reference to Eileen’s discussion of the book Hidden in Plain View. I >have always thought that the pattern was not in existance as early as it is >referenced in the publication.Shelly Z > > > ——————————

Date: Mon, 22 Feb 1999 12:21:47 EST From: JQuilt@aol.com To: qhl@cuenet.com Subject: QHL: (no subject) Message-ID: 762b6685.36d1922b@aol.com Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit when I wrote my “Give me a break” message a month or so ago…after reading the review in USA Today…someone wrote to the list saying people(Me) shouldn’t say negative things about a book before they read it…well the review was enough for me NOT to buy the book…that’s what reviews are all about…. When you read that a book was written based on the “fact” that someone who died gave all of the secret codes to a stranger…….I think it’s time to say Buyer Beware jean


Date: Mon, 22 Feb 1999 11:21:10 -0600 (Central Standard Time) From: Mary Persyn<MARY.PERSYN@VALPO.EDU To: qhl@cuenet.com Subject: QHL: Imperfections Message-ID:<SIMEON.9902221110.D@VUNEWS.VALPO.EDU.VALPO.EDU Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; CHARSET=US-ASCII

Have any of you seen this year’s issue of “Vintage Quilts”, the magazine issue from ??? (I’m at work and the mag is at home) containing pictures of old quilts and how to reproduce them? I remember we discussed last year’s issue on line. Anyway, this years issue has an Amish quilt that is all churn dash blocks except one crown of thorns? block and the article says it is a typical example of not wanting to make a perfect quiilt. To my way of thinking the magazine is perpetuating the myth. There are some lovely quilts pictured in the magazine, but again they did not give any information about the provenance of the quilts or much other information of a historical nature. I have some questions about the information they did give also. I think that detracts from the magazine (but didn’t stop me from buying it, of course. :+)) There are articles by Bev Dunivant (hope I spelled the name right) on crazy quilts, Anita Schakelford (ditto as to spelling) on collecting old quilts, and ??? (another senior moment). Now returning to lurkdom, Mary in sunny and cold Valparaiso, IN

Date: Mon, 22 Feb 1999 12:27:29 EST From: WileneSmth@aol.com To: QHL@cuenet.com Subject: QHL: re: antique “orphan” blocks Message-ID: 6f9c79c1.36d19381@aol.com Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit << I have been pulling out all of the antique “orphan” blocks that I’ve inherited or found… just wondering what others of you have done to display these. I’m going to be doing some redecorating in the spring and want to use these in my decor. Just want to know what good ideas are out there to use these little treasures in new and different ways. Found one I forgot I had… found it a few years ago at a flea market. I have no idea what pattern it is but I bought it because it has three paper template pieces pinned to it. They were cut from an envelope and as fortune would have it, there is a postmark! November 26, 1928 at 4:30 p.m.

I would like to somehow display this block along with the templates. Ideas welcome! Lauri Klobas Pacific PaKarendes, California >> This is what I’ve learned to do with the ones that I avidly collect. I’ve accumulated a large collection (about 1,000 now) of these “orphan blocks” over the past 20+ years and they have become a vital part of my quilt pattern research. I’ve learned more about quilt making and quilt makers from them than from any other single source. Many of these were actually “pattern blocks” never intended to be used in a quilt, but as a pattern and how it went together, especially when one finds the templates attached to them. I did a research paper for AQSG about these that’s in Uncoverings 1986. My collection now fills three very large boxes and many of them are unidentified as to name or published source. They range in age from about the 1820s-1830s to the mid-20th century. I use my huge collection of original vintage published sources (and database) to identify a possible source (or sources) for each block (based on the age of its fabrics), and print a label on 100% cotton paper, attaching it to each block with a brass safety pin like we used in the Kansas Quilt Project. I use Barbara Brackman’s numbering system to keep them in a “findeable” order.

While it’s all an exercise in “educated guesswork,” it also gives me a chance to study how each quiltmaker interpreted her design as compared to the published illustration that might have inspired her (and some of these comparisons can be quite humorous today). I once attempted a simple framing project to “protect” them, but soon learned that the backs are nearly as important as the fronts, so I have gradually “unframed” many of them. I shudder when I think of the many “pattern blocks” that were wasted by others in the 1970s in throw pillows and other projects, but that’s all part of the learning process for all of us. –Wilene

Date: Mon, 22 Feb 1999 19:51:45 +0400 From: Xenia Cord<XECORD@NETUSA1.NET To: QHL@cuenet.com Subject: QHL: Re: Log Cabin Message-ID: 36D17D09.1F4C@netusa1.net Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit On the question raised by Shelly of the age of Log Cabin as a quilt design: in Indiana there is a quilt made shortly after Lincoln’s death, in the Log Cabin design. When the funeral train carrying Lincoln’s body passed through Indianapolis, the pillars of the State House were wrapped in black wool bunting. The plan was that the catafalque was to be placed in the rotunda so the citizenry could file past, but a terrible storm necessitated a change in plans, and the casket remained on the train. After the train departed, an Indianapolis restaurant owner obtained some of the bunting and gave it to his wife and daughter, who made a very somber Log Cabin quilt from it. The quilt is rusty black and dark green, primarily, with red centers and a pinky beige wool for the light half of the blocks. The set is Barn Raising. It is presumed that the quilt was made at the time the bunting was obtained, so around 1866-68. You can see the quilt on page 31 of Quilts of Indiana (1991), and read the story. Although not pictured there, there is a photo of the state house and the draping taken when the funeral train was in Indianapolis. A book with this photo is with the quilt. The quilt has been exhibited a number of times in central Indiana, as the descendant is generous in lending it to qualified exhibitors. Xenia ——————————


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members services, including subscription changes, visit our

website at http//www.QuiltHistory.com.


Date Tue, 23 Feb 1999 000005 EST

From KareQuilt@aol.com

Dear QHL,

The last two QHL Digests that I have received (#51 & 52) contained a long list

of posts in the table of contents, but as I scrolled down to read them, I

realized I only received about four posts each time out of all those listed in

the T of C. Can someone from QHL respond to me privately. I cannot read all

the posts when I open the Digest. Is this the “worms” doing? What a mess.

Karen


Date Tue, 23 Feb 1999 000221 EST

From KareQuilt@AOL.COM

To qhl@cuenet.com

Subject QHL Posting troubles

Message-ID b262060e.36d2365d@aol.com

Content-type text/plain; charset=US-ASCII

Content-transfer-encoding 7bit

When I say I cannot “read” all the pots, I really mean they don’t even appear

following the table of contents. Only maybe the first four posts on the list

appear in the” body” that follows. Is anyone else experiencing this problem!!

I have “missed” all kinds of posts I would love to read! What has happened?

Karen


Date Tue, 23 Feb 1999 153743 -0400

From sven@pnc.com.au

To QHL@cuenet.com

Subject QHL Australian Prison Quilt at auction.

I am having difficulties with the description of the Australian Prison

quilt that has been placed for auction on the new Quilt Collectors site.

I have been corresponding with the owner of this site and we now have

been given two dates, 1860 and 1880, at two separate occasions.

I was also told that it was just a TOP until very recently and was

quilted within the past three years.

Transportation of convicts to Australia ended way before 1880!!!

The value placed on the quilt is quilt extrordinary.

The following is what I recieved from my query to Mark Kriss.


Here’s what I’ve learned from Diana Leone about the Australian Prison

Quilt

“The Prisoners’ Quilt, from my understanding when I exhibited the quilt

in

Melburne in 1997, is that this rare piece was made by the prision women

who

were being transported from England to Australia while on board the

ship.

The women were being sent to become the wives of the early settlers of

Australia. Each person was given 3 pieces of fabric. Each person worked

with the 3 pieces of fabrics, cutting and sewing the small triangles

together into a larger section probably 1′ to 2′ in size. The many

different sections were put together and the top was finished. The early

“Medallian” style with the center area formed and the rows and sections

raidiating out from this center area is familiar to historians as early

English, possible 1860’s. I can do further research dates to be more

exact.

If you know more about these please contact me. From what I heard this

piece is extremely rare, one of possible 2-3 in existence.

This piece is museum quality, one center piece of fabric was weak and

has

been replaced. (This top was quilted by an expert in 1996.) The hand

quilting is approximately 12 or more stitches to the inch. The piece is

very stable and should withstand proper archival display for many years

to

come.

The minimum auction price will probably be about $5-6,000. I have it

appraised at $12,000 and could be much higher with more research.

(Shipping

and insurance to be paid by buyer. Add approx $120.)

It really should be purchased by an Austrailan and some day donated to

the

History Museum. Thanks for the interest.” — Diana Leone


As an Australian I am extremely interested in this quilt, (though I will

certainly not be the one to buy it.) Is there anyone on the list who

would look at the photos and give me a small opinion? Hiranya is also

very interested.

Lorraine in Oz


Date Tue, 23 Feb 1999 012456 EST

From Kathi2174@AOL.COM

To qhl@cuenet.com

From Mark Kriss mkriss@quiltcollector.com

Dear Charter Members and Friends of QuiltCollector,

For your information and reference, I’m enclosing below a press release

about the new QuiltCollector auction website which will be on the

PRNewswire tomorrow morning.

Feel free to forward, copy or post this release to your friends,

colleagues, news groups or guilds who may have an interest.

Thanks in advance for helping to get the word out about our new auction

website!

Best regards,

–Mark Kriss, Director


Rare Australian “Prison Quilt” to be Auctioned on the Internet;

New Online Auction Features Quilts of Great Historic Value

PALO ALTO, Calif., Feb. 23 / PRNewswire / — A rare 120-year old

Australian “Prisoners’ Quilt” is one of many quilts of historic value to be

offered on the new QuiltCollector.com auction website.

See photo at http//www.quiltcollector.com/prisoner300dpi.htm

The museum-quality “Prisoners’ Quilt” is one of probably only two or

three in existence. It is among the quilts to be in the Opening Auction (date

to be announced April 5) on the new website which gives collectors and

home/office decorators the opportunity to easily purchase antique quilts of

great historic value. See http//www.quiltcollector.com

“This quilt was made by women prisoners while on board a ship en route

from England to Australia circa 1880,” says Mark R. Kriss, managing director

of QuiltCollector. “The women, who were being sent to become wives of

Australian settlers, were each given three pieces of fabric to cut and sew

into small triangles. These pieces were then combined into the single

Prisoners’ Quilt.”

QuiltCollector is the only online trading community just for quilts,

Kriss says. Unlike “flea-market” online auctions that offer dozens of

different categories of goods for sale, QuiltCollector buyers can select from

over a dozen quilt-specific sub-categories, Kriss says.

“The timing of this new service is excellent,” says Diana Leone, a

distinguished quiltmaker, author and owner of a large antique quilt collection

that includes the Australian “Prisoners’ Quilt”. “Quiltmakers and quilt owners

need an outlet for their pieces, and a friendly quilt-centric place to shop,

learn and meet people.”

Categories of quilts to be available include abstract–traditional and

non-traditional patterns; African-American; Amish; applique; collage;

coverlet; crazy; Hawaiian; patchwork; whole cloth; as well as antique & toy

sewing machines, quilt books, and quilt memorabilia.

All listings include photographs, and are keyword searchable. A

“Certificate of Authentication” service is available to help reassure buyers

of the authenticity and value of the antique quilts on auction.

Submissions for QuiltCollector’s Opening Auction are due March 31. See

http//www.quiltcollector.com.

SOURCE Sandhill Arts (parent company of QuiltCollector)

CONTACT Mark R. Kriss, Sandhill Arts, 650-857-9035 or email

mkriss@sandhillarts.com

  • – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – +

Mark Kriss mkriss@quiltcollector.com


Date Tue, 23 Feb 1999 100037 +0100

From “Tilde Binger” binger.hougaard@get2net.dk

First, thank you to all who responded to my question re. Hidden in Plain

view.

I am not going to write an answer any of the specific comments made here (or

to me privately), but only to give a more general comment, mostly because I

need to. I work, professionally, with history and the writing of history,

with oral traditions and with evaluation of sources. I am NOT, however, a

quilt-historian, and my knowledge of US-history is very basic. Also – belive

me – in my specialized field the black vs white “fight” (and I am not

referring to anything as immaterial as colour of skin here -) is far worse

than most of you can imagine. Since this is the case, it is very, very

important, that one’s method is sound, and that the data is solid. It is the

existence of data that makes your case. To argue with “we might not have

found yet” or “this might concievably have happened…” is shoddy method.

To argue from what is not there is a definite no-no in scholarly history

writing (but still it happens). If data is what shows (proves) a thing to be

so absense of data can never do the same. If it did, anything would be or

could be true, and everyone could write the history s/he would like. Since

this be-lies the purpose of (scholarly) history-writing, arguments from

silence are strictly forbidden.

History and the writing of history can also never depend on whether one

likes the results or not (again, it is frequently presented as such, but

this is also shoddy worksmanship). If one is committed to the writing of

history, one has to work with the data, the solid data, that is there, and

to work with it all. No more, no less. If this leads one to conclusions that

are different from what one expected or which one does not like, there isn’t

a whole lot one can do about it (well, not publish it, but then someone else

will, eventually -). If no data exists, the history is no longer history,

but story.

Since this is the case, and from what I have been told so far, “Hidden in

Plain View” is story, and thus folklore. Folklore is interesting, IMO very

interesting, but it is not history or history-writing in the sense we in the

late twentieth century percieve history-writing (i.e. as reports of fact and

reconstructions of the past from the extant data).

Oral tradition is part of folklore and of folklore studies, and is also a

mighty interesting thing. But Oral tradition is …. not to be relied on

when one wants accuracy of data (anyone interested can write me and get the

title of the long, very high-brow, very longhaired and very, very boring

basic study on this). Oral tradition can be profound, can carry important

nuggets of “historical data” and can even have a “kernel of fact”. Problem

is, it is impossible to discern from the tale itself, what is fact and what

is fiction. One has to have access to other sources in order to falsify or

verify any given oral tradition with regard to its historicity (that is, how

reliable it is in the facts dept -).

Now, imagine (and this is fairly recent history) that there are no written

sources. No-one can read, no-one can write. Unless you are of an age where

you were an adult in 1950, how would you discern between the Korea-war and

the Vietnam war ? Same general area, same general problem, far away from

where you are and were living. Anyone under the age of 40 would -without

written sources – have great difficulties discerning between the two, and a

good number would not even know they happened at all. Now, move back a bit.

If there were no written records, how much would you know of something that

happened 100 years ago ? 150 years ago ? 200 years ago ? Some information

would stay in certain circles, particularly if it was tied up with specific

items, but in general, the third generation is where oral traditions

disappear. If history-writing depends on data in order to show that things

happened in a certain way, oral tradition is not valid data.

When all this is said. I will say that I find the story that quilts (and,

for that matter any other type of inconspicuous household items) could be

used as signals, very believable (this is mostly based on data from the

various european “undergrouds” that existed during WW2, where the placement

of a vase of flowers could mean the difference between life and death).

Finding it believable, however, is not the same as it being true. It is a

wonderful story. It is believable. We might as well get used to it. However,

from what you all have told me, I also do not believe that the story which

is told is factual. “True” perhaps, but hardly factual.

I hope I have not stepped too much on anyone’s toes, it’s only that history

in all its aspects is important to me, and shoddy works(wo)manship gets my

hackles up.

Thank you for your time

Tilde

In Copenhagen


Date Tue, 23 Feb 1999 095944 -0000

From “Sally Ward” sward@t-ward.demon.co.uk

To “QHL” QHL@cuenet.com

Subject QHL Screening Mail?

Message-ID <001201be5f24$ea5430c0$eb58e4d4@bob>

Content-Type multipart/alternative;

boundary=”—-=_NextPart_000_001A_01BE5F13.3D2B0740″

This is a multi-part message in MIME format.

——=_NextPart_000_001A_01BE5F13.3D2B0740

Content-Type text/plain;

charset=”iso-8859-1″

Content-Transfer-Encoding quoted-printable

The Happy 99 worm has indeed been a troublesome episode, but it is the =

first in my many months on the list and there have been so many =

warnings about it that it should not have been a surprise that it turned =

up eventually. Kris maintains the list voluntarily and I am sure has =

many other things to deal with in her life. As we (should) all know not =

to open unsolicited files, I am happy to screen my own mail in return =

for the enjoyment and education QHL gives me. (even the Garden of Eden =

had worms….)

Sally

——=_NextPart_000_001A_01BE5F13.3D2B0740

——=_NextPart_000_001A_01BE5F13.3D2B0740–


Date Tue, 23 Feb 1999 072554 -0500

From Jean Ann quiltmag@mindspring.com

Lorraine in Oz, I am also having difficulties with the description of the

Australian prison quilt because transportation of prisoners did end before

  1. Although I love folk lore and oral history one always has to suspect

that the information has been embellished, romanticized, or exaggerated, or

not remembered quite correctly over the generations. I wonder if anyone

researched the fabric to determine when it would have been manufactured?

That would help set the date. Diane Leone has much integrity and would not

misrepresent this quilt knowingly, and she would have been careful about

the information she gathered. From reading what she says about the quilt,

she was going on information given to her by others.

No doubt “brides” were sent to Australia long after prison ships stopped,

and if these women were brides for the male settlers of Australia maybe

they were not prisoners at all. There, that is my addition to the oral

history mis-information. Anyone else?

Jean Ann Eitel, Editor

QUILT magazine site http//www.quiltmag.com – IRC chat site

http//www.quilttalk.com

Personal web site http//www.mindspring.com/~quiltmag/jeanann/jaeindex.html


Date Tue, 23 Feb 1999 112143 -0500

From Diane Seamans dsigns@cyberportal.net

To QHL@cuenet.com

Subject QHL Quilting Trip to England

Message-ID 36D2D597.4384@cyberportal.net

Content-Type text/plain; charset=us-ascii

Content-Transfer-Encoding 7bit

I have been lurking for several months and enjoy this list very much.

I saw a listing this week which included information about a retreat

including a registration form. I didn’t know this could be done on this

list.

So since one has been submitted, I’d like to let all of you know of a

trip which has been designed with quilters in mind. I asked the travel

service, “Britain Before You..and beyond”, to design a trip that would

be of interest for quilters. There are openings for up to five more

people. This is a small group trip, up to 15 people with individual

attention and suggestions from us if you wish to explore on your own

during “free time”. I hope you can join us!

(Ann of “Britain Before You” is an American woman who lives most of the

year in London).

Leave Boston on Sept. 23, arrive on Friday morning 24th

10 nights, 2 meals daily

London-Festival of Quilts

V&A Museum, theater ticket

Liberty of London – More than just a visit to the store!

Greenwich-boat ride on the Thames, weather permitting

Bath-guided city tour includes Royal Crescent where Jane Austen lived.

Avebury, Stone Circle

Cotswolds

Dartmoor-visit with Devon Guild of Craftsmen

Hampton Court Palace where we will stay for three nights with free

access to palace and 60 acres of gardens;

Entry fees and buttons for group events

Train transportation, minivans and London travel pass

Cost $2339. per person, double occupancy, single supplement per hotel.

Airfare not included (This past fall airfare at this time of the year

was approximately $450. from Boston)

For a free packet of information and registration form, send e-mail to

Diane at dsigns@cyberportal.net

>


Date Tue, 23 Feb 1999 111406 EST

From KirkColl@aol.com

To QHL@cuenet.com

Subject QHL Re Quilt Heritage Foundation and Lectures at NQA

Message-ID ae85e77.36d2d3ce@aol.com

Content-type text/plain; charset=US-ASCII

Content-transfer-encoding 7bit

To answer Bobbie’s questions

1) The Quilt Heritage Foundation is the non-profit (501-c-3) corporation we

formed two years ago to sponsor the Quilt Restoration Conference and the Crazy

Quilt Society and Conference and other educational activities relating to

quilt history and preservation. Since then we have also added The Dead Quilt

Society, which is an effort to preserve old quilt patterns from quilts that

are too fragile to restore.

The Quilt Restoration Society is separate from the Foundation. Camille

Cognac, the founder of the Restoration Society, decided not to bring it under

the auspices of the Foundation. She is keeping it as a private enterprise.

The Foundation is coordinating the appraisals at the NQA. We are co-

sponsoring Quilt Heritage Days at Trinity Cathedral across the street from the

auditorium. The church will be holding an antique quilt exhibit downstairs

and luncheons and Victorian teas Thurs-Sat., and we will offer lectures and

appraisals upstairs.

Jan Sears is the lead appraiser — she is from Nebraska and NQA always asks a

local appraiser to serve as the main appraiser. However, we expect more work

than she can handle, so if there are other AQS appraisers out there who plan

to be in Omaha and would like to do some work while you are here, let me know.

The lectures will be offered by Jan, Cindy Brick, a staff member from the Ford

Conservation Center and me. We are dividing up the lectures right now, so I

can’t tell you who will be be doing which for another couple of weeks.

If you have any other questions about NQA or the Quilt Heritage Foundation,

give me a call at 1-800-599-0094 or drop me a note to QuiltHF@aol.com.

Thanks,

Nancy Kirk


Date Tue, 23 Feb 1999 150504 -0000

From “Audrey Cameron” audrey.cameron@virgin.net

To “Quilt History” QHL@cuenet.com

Subject QHL Log Cabin

Message-ID <000201be5f56$e9ddb580$2079a8c2@audrey.cameron.virgin.net>

Content-Type text/plain;

charset=”iso-8859-1″

Content-Transfer-Encoding 7bit

Hi Everyone,

How is everyone feeling after the happy” excitement? I hope that’s the end

of it but I suspect not.

Anyhow for some information on the origins of “log cabin”. There is a

strong feeling that it may be British in origin & brought to the New World

by Scotish & Irish emigrants.

If one looks at old medieval maps you will see that the characteristic

makeup of small farms was in a long, narrow strip & a medieval village would

be surrounded with a “log cabin quilt pattern” of these strip fields.

Several strips scattered all over could beheld or be worked by one farming

family. Could this be the origin of the pattern? There is no evidence one

way or the other but it is interesting.

One of the earliest uses of this pattern was on an English perfume

bag dating to 1650. The first known full quilts date from Victorian times

probably about 1850 & are quite common in Scotland.

Averil Corby, the veneranted English quilt writer, attests to a women

from Stirlingshire (Scotland) who had log cabin quilts made from patterns

handed down in the family from the “Forty Five.” ( The Jacobite Uprising of

1745 – Bonnie Prince Charlie & all that.)

The earliest example of a log cabin quilt was made of shirting fabrics

in 1860 & is in the Bowes Museum, Barnard Castle in County Durham.

The above information is from Janet Rae’s book The Quilts of the British

Isles which I believe is out-of-print.

Audrey Cameron on a beautiful sunny, but cold day in England

audrey.cameron@virgin.net


Date Tue, 23 Feb 1999 112741 EST

From ZegrtQuilt@aol.com

To QHL@cuenet.com

Subject QHL Arizona

Message-ID 963bb3fa.36d2d6fd@aol.com

Content-type text/plain; charset=US-ASCII

Content-transfer-encoding 7bit

A friend is moving to Tucson later this Spring and has asked if I know a

resource for stretching and installing a quilt in the Tucson area. I would

appreciate any information I might pass on to her. Thank you Shelly Zegart


Date: Sat, 20 Feb 1999 23:07:13 EST

From: EllynLK@aol.com

I have been pulling out all of the antique “orphan” blocks that I’ve

inherited

or found… just wondering what others of you have done to display these.

I’m going to be doing some redecorating in the spring and want to use these

in

my decor. Just want to know what good ideas are out there to use these little

treasures in new and different ways.

Found one I forgot I had… found it a few years ago at a flea market. I

have no idea what pattern it is but I bought it because it has three paper

template pieces pinned to it. They were cut from an envelope and as fortune

would have it, there is a postmark! November 26, 1928 at 4:30 p.m. I would

like to somehow display this block along with the templates.

Ideas welcome!

Lauri Klobas

Pacific PaKarendes, California


Date: Sat, 20 Feb 1999 22:16:46 -0700

From: Eileen Trestain ejtrestain@earthlink.net

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: underground RR book

Message-ID: 36CF96BE.DDC84A5E@earthlink.net

Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii

Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

OKAY folks. I just can’t bite my tongue any more.

I bought the underground RR book, Hidden in Plain View. First, I have to

say up front that I believe in the likelihood that an Underground RR may

have used quilts in some manner to give directions, or memorize the way,

similar to a map. I bought the book believing this to be a possibility.

I believe the African American culture is/was wise in many more ways

that anyone ever gave them credit for at the time, and that their

resiliency of spirit is what helped them to survive in the most

appalling of conditions.

Now to the book itself. The original author of the book, Jaqueline

Tobin, met an African American woman selling quilts in a flea market in

South Carolina, and the woman hinted at the Underground RR legend, which

has been with us for years. Leaving aside the possibility that this

could have been a most delightful ploy for an elderly woman to sell her

quilts to a tourist, we assume she has told them an oral legend handed

down that nobody so far has been able to prove.

For the first 63 pages, we get to read the forward by not one, but three

people who I presume are well known for their knowledge of African

American history and African tribal history, as well as introductions by

both authors. One of these people is Cuesta Benberry, a highly respected

quilt historian.

Much of the first portion of the book itself is about African tribal

arts and history. The book makes a point that the African American

community has a long history of oral traditions. I understand that,

too. But every time I felt that approached the subject the book was

supposed to be about in the first half of the book, I felt like they

dodged, and danced, and never quite reached the subject I was interested

in.. the quilts.

the authors give a grouping of quilt blocks which the woman named as the

blocks that were used. Then they take us on a convoluted journey of how

they decided what the blocks may have meant in use. One of the ideas

which they have put forward was the Dresden plate pattern symbolizing a

town of Dresden Ohio. Does anyone know of any recorded history of the

pattern named as Dresden Plate in the 1800’s? Yes, the pattern existed

in c.1800 medallion quilts, where it is now named in England as a

Dahlia, but can anyone tell me how old the Dresden Plate name is? Yes,

Wagon Wheel patterns were in use. Why would the Wheel pattern lead them

to Dresden, Ohio?

Next, we come to how old spiritual songs relate to underground railroad

themes. And about the representational pictorial quilts of Harriet

Powers. But, so far, I fail to see a great relation to proving the

underground RR theme.

Now, to a more telling part, in my estimation. The photographs. Many of

the photographs are recently made quilts, made by the second author,

Raymond Dobard. Staged in scenic positions in old slave quarters, but

in bright modern colors, the quilts do stand out. However, it is the

quilts which are supposedly slave quilts, one which was “a exceptional

example of an early log cabin quilt that was made by a fugitive slave in

the 1840’s….” Though a terrible photo supplied by the museum, it

appears to be a classic C.1880 black silk quilt with considerable

damage. On the next page is another log cabin quilt which “is said to be

slave made. The date is given as 1830’s by it’s owner.” Here we have a

c.1830 quilt, complete with a nice strip of mourning print right up the

middle, at the front of the picture? It looks to me like a classic

c.1900 log cabin utility quilt, with a baptist fan quilt pattern

overall, and possibly a moderately thick to very thick batting, common

at that time. Even relative novices I have asked, out of curiosity, and

without leading the witness, as it were, have responded when asked “When

was this quilt made?” have said without hesitation “Turn of the

Century.”

A few pages later, we have a quilt, admittedly made in 1980, from the

MEMORY of a quilt owned by the maker in her childhood, but which was

destroyed by a fire. It features stars in a random pattern, and an

unusual quilting design, with some colored threads as some of the

quilting. This is supposed to be the topographical map of an unnamed

plantation, where the maker, who is still living, quite obviously never

lived during the years of slave incarceration.

On the following page, we have a quilt made by the Daughters Of Dorcas,

an African American Quilters Guild. This quilt was made in 1987-88, and

features several of the patterns listed by the elderly woman. (but who

DIDN’t use those same patterns in the 1980’s for their sampler quilts?)

It is convenient for the authors that the African American quilt maker,

Ozella Williams, passed away last fall, as there is no one left to

further question by any other person who might be interested, or who may

have been more through in their research. If I, at first glance, can

shoot holes in the dates of the quilts they tell us are very early

examples of Log cabin quilts, and this is what kind of knowledge and

research they have built their story around, it makes the rest of the

book look pretty shoddy.

I personally had hoped for some definite proof, or at least a decent

jumping off place. The best part of the book, in my opinion, is the

extensive bibliography on underground RR articles and books which we

find at the back of their book. If you want to know more about the

Underground RR, use that list. If you want to know about quilts from

the underground RR, this isn’t going to help you much.

Just my very personal opinion of this much discussed book.

Eileen

Date: Sat, 20 Feb 1999 22:29:23 -0700

From: Eileen Trestain ejtrestain@earthlink.net

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: battings

Message-ID: 36CF99B3.6AC85FFE@earthlink.net

Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii

Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

I guess I am on a soap box tonight.

There are a couple things to consider other than ease of quilting in

choosing battings.

Cotton and wool battings have a long history of survival. Polyester

doesn’t.

Cotton and Wool are very breathable, and are not so likely to trap

moisture under the quilt, so they feel cooler in the summer and warmer

in teh winter.

Wool and cotton are somewhat fire resistant, wool more than cotton. If

you see a burned quilt with a poly batting, you will never forget the

sight of how it burned , and melted. There is nothig quite like the

feel and sound of a smoked poly batting, which melts between the layers

of cotton top and lining, and crinkles and crackles as you handle it.

Rather eerie whan you think somebody might have been sleeping under it

as it melted.

I like Mountain Mist Blue Ribbon, probably because grandma would never

use anything else, and I like that traditional feel, and Hobbs Organic

if I want a bit more loft. I like way Hobbs wool feels, but I am afraid

to handle it too long, as I am allergic to wool, and don’t want to take

teh chance. I don’t quilt with it.

Eileen

Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 11:33:32 -0500

From: Nancy Roberts robertsn@norwich.net

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: Story of reproduction fabric

Message-ID: 36D0355C.355D@norwich.net

Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii

Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

For those interested in how reproduction fabric lines are designed, you might

check out Chiori Santiago’s article on the topic in The Fabric Special

Showcase, a special issue of Traditional Quiltworks magazine from Chitra

Publications. The article covers P&B Textile’s collection based on quilts

from the Oakland Museum. This issue is no longer on the newsstands, but back

issues can be purchased from the publisher if you missed it. The website is

http://www.QuiltTownUSA.com/ or you can call a credit card order at

800-628-8244. Nancy


Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 11:43:21 -0500

From: Alan Kelchner quiltfix@mail.jax.bellsouth.net

To: qhl@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: should I buy?

Message-ID: 36D037A8.1BB803FD@mail.jax.bellsouth.net

Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii

Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

Liz, I have only one suggestion about your quilt – if it is something

that you dearly love, cannot stand the thought of not owning, you feel

the price is reasonable and you can afford it, then run (not walk) back

to the store and get the silly thing before someone else falls in

love!!!! I missed out on one (at that point too chicken to bid on ebay)

that I wish I had bought. Can’t get it out of my mind. But OTOH, if

it’s not screaming to come home, I won’t buy it. So I buy very few any

more. Would rather buy something that wants to come home with me. And

this does not mean that they are fancy and expensive. That is not

requisite. My most favorite one is a utilitarian piece that is worn (it

was filler for another, very ugly top). As for date, it’s not fair to

ask online (whimper-chinquiver). We have to see it. I will stick my neck

out far enough to guess at depression era, but that is not definite.

My suggestion is to buy and take it home. Love it as is, folded over a

chair that is infrequently used, so you can look at it. And never on

the couch – someone will inevitably snuggle under it. One of my first

jobs came from such an incident. The ladies daughter got under it and

was re-arranging the portion over her legs with her foot (don’t we all

before we sit up and use our hands?). Anyhow, the quilt was a fragile

pieceand, sure enough, her foot went straight through the center! It was

easily repaired, and (brag, brag) I couldn’t find the repair easily

myself (someone caught me photographing the wrong place – oops).


Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 11:56:07 -0500

From: Alan Kelchner quiltfix@mail.jax.bellsouth.net

To: qhl@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: humility

Message-ID: 36D03AA6.24462DC5@mail.jax.bellsouth.net

Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii

Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

Someone may need to help me here – memory must be going. Watched

television the other night and my interest was piqued when the narrator

was talking about how these (3rd world men) would not make their (item)

perfect, as only Mohammed was perfect. This was on Discovery/TLC, and I

meant to remember everything, but …………

Wait, just remembered – It was PBS, “Antiques Roadshow”, and whichever

middle-eastern tribe had woven the rug they were appraising (the rug was

HUGE). The man appraising stated that they wouldn’t use matching dye

lots of yarn to create the piece, because only Mohammed was perfect and

capable of making perfection. And as the years went on, the dye lots

would fade differently, making the differences even more noticeable (the

rug in question had blue sections that were two different shades of the

same color). Of course, the flags went up in my brain because of the

connection to humility blocks in American quilts. I still think that the

original humility myths were to cover mistakes, but I also believe that

the romanticism of the legend led people to do this on purpose.

Now if I could remember the name of the woman I ran into last week. Used

to work with her, can remember the day she came in beaming because her

bosom looked bigger (new Wonder Bra), but it’s been a week and I’ll be

damned if I can remember her name! Must be a guy thing to remember her

chest and not her name (LOL) !

Alan


Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 13:27:36 EST

From: QuiltEvals@aol.com

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: Re: Question about Quilter’s Heritage and more.

Message-ID: 6c465c1a.36d05018@aol.com

Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII

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In a message dated 2/20/99 6:51:25 PM Pacific Standard Time, QHL-Digest-

request@cuenet.com writes:

<<

Please tell us who is the Quilt Heritage Foundation. How does one become a

member. Who will be doing quilt appraisals. The lecture titles sound great!

Who

is giving which lecture?

Thank you.

Bobbie A. Aug

>

Yes, Nancy, I am curious about this as well?

Thanks,

Deborah Roberts


Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 11:27:40 -0700

From: “Jeanne.Fetzer” Jeanne.Fetzer@integrityonline3.com

To: “Eileen Trestain” ejtrestain@earthlink.net, QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: Re: underground RR book

Message-ID: <01b101be5dca$6741e020$36e399d0@jeanne.fetzer>

Content-Type: text/plain;

charset=”iso-8859-1″

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Thank you for taking the time to point out where you question the

authenticity of the Dobard book. All I want to say is, “Amen.” I don’t say

that to disprove anything, but to echo the need to look at information and

then ask questions. If we want quilt history to be taken seriously, we must

carefully research and support our findings based on fact.

Thank you, thank you!

Jeanne Fetzer


Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 13:36:17 EST

From: QuiltEvals@aol.com

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: More on Reproductions

Message-ID: 3ad0c564.36d05221@aol.com

Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII

Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit

Yesterday, I had the privilege of seeing the strike offs for a new “1840’s”

line by Pat Nickols….Pat, I hope it was okay to tell, I just had to share

the news. The line is exciting….very accurate in detail and color. Of

course, there are the original colors and added color ways as well, but they

are all WONDERFUL! We were able to compare a few of the original fabrics

to the repros. Pat, like Sharon Newman has taken actual prints from quilts

and fabrics in her collection. This seems to be the way to do it – at least

for these two. The line is being produced by P&B and should be available in

late Spring, Pat will be introducing it at Quilt Market this May.

Sorry, I don’t usually do this, and I don’t mean to sound like a commercial,

but when you see them you will understand my excitement.

Deborah Roberts

Costa Mesa, CA


Date: Sun, 21 Feb 99 16:22:48 EST

From: “Bob Mills” decision@tigger.jvnc.net

To: “Quilter’s Heritage List” QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: Orvus

Message-ID: decision.1270019808E@tigger.jvnc.net

To Jennifer and others:

In the East, Agway which is a retail store and nursery catering to area

farmers and yuppies, sells Orvus and it is not special order.

I just bought a container of 7 1/2 pounds for $19.95 and my quilt store

orvis is 8 oz. for $4.99. You need to find something like a feedstore or

farmers co-op. I live in a very suburban area of NJ but am lucky we still

have these stores. And my quilts are getting very clean.

About a year or so ago I went into Agway and was told they were sold out.

Mrs. G. is washing all her sheep this week!

Jan Drechsler (not Bob)

http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/bobmills/jan.html

Date: Sun, 21 Feb 99 16:22:47 EST

From: “Bob Mills” decision@tigger.jvnc.net

To: “Quilter’s Heritage List” QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: Repro fabrics

Message-ID: decision.1270019807D@tigger.jvnc.net

Just a word of thanks on the repro fabric information. Already I have

learned a lot!

Jan Drechsler (not Bob)

http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/bobmills/jan.html

Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 16:34:18 EST

From: Kathi2174@aol.com

To: quiltfix@mail.jax.bellsouth.net

Cc: qhl@cuenet.com

Subject: Re: QHL: humility

Message-ID: 5aef56f6.36d07bda@aol.com

Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII

Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit

Alan,

I did get to see wool yarn being dyed in the bazaar in Herat, Afghanistan in

  1. I’m sure the methods had not changed in centuries. The term for the

streakiness in the color is “abrash.” It is a word of Turkish origin, that

originally meant the dappled or speckled colors on horses. It has long been

used to refer to the variation in saturation/hue in yarns used to weave rugs.

It’s caused in two ways: 1. By crude (not bad, just primitive) technology

used by dyers doing up a single batch. The second is by reusing the dye-bath.

The second and third uses have less pigment, therefore give varying shades.

Not much to do with quilts, is it? Unless we relate the “use what you have “

concept to explain variations in techniques in stead of the romantic lack of

perfection notion.

Off the soap box!

Kathi in Calif.

Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 15:21:09 -0800

From: “Christine Thresh” christine@winnowing.com

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: I read Hidden in Plain View

Message-Id: 199902212322.PAA00834@server.cctrap.com

Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1

Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

Tilde’s post asked for input from those who read the book, Hidden in Plain

View.

I read the book and was disappointed. The story told by the old African

American woman was interesting, but the book did nothing to really back it

up. There were lots of references to African textiles and Masonic symbols,

but they did not seem to tie in with the story told by the quilter. The

books I own about quilting patterns led me to believe many of the patterns

she said were in the quilt “map” were not in usage at the time of the

Underground Railroad. The author of Hidden stated that she obtained the

information

from the quilter in one three hour session.

Christine Thresh

http://www.winnowing.com

Christine Thresh

http://www.winnowing.com/

Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 20:00:30 -0500 (EST)

From: JOCELYNM@delphi.com

To: QHL@cuenet.com, QHL-Digest@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL-Digest Digest V99 #50

Message-id: 01J80NAUQJ3C9C87GT@delphi.com

Content-type: TEXT/PLAIN; CHARSET=US-ASCII

On 20-FEB-1999 21:53:29.5 QHL said to JOCELYNM

Well, for my two cents, I supported the decision of the (A)IQA to

have only quilts that had not been exhibited elsewhere. There are so

many wonderful quilts out there that it is good to see different

quilts at the different shows instead of quilts “making the rounds”.

Jean Ann,

It was my understanding, however, that this rule applied to things like

entering our quilts in our local quilt shows, the county fair, etc. The talk

here was how it was going to ‘dumb down’ local shows, if the very best

quilters held out their work for the big shows…plus, if a quilt could only

be shown once, that seems like a shame!

OTOH, I really hate to go to a show and see things I’ve seen before. So

I don’t know what the happy balance is…

seen on samplers where the maker cross-stitches the letter Z backwards

so as not to offend God by making a perfect piece and have thought the

practice might carry over to quilting.

Jill,

I once spoke with a ‘plain’ quilter who said that it would be an

affront to God to deliberately put in a mistake, because that would mean you

thought you HAD achieved perfection up to that point! I don’t know if

that were the teachings of her sect, or her personal opinion, though.

Anyway, the quilt has what I would call a humility block in the lower

right hand side of the quilt. The “mistake on purpose” is that the

flowers are a totally different color than the rest of the quilt. It

This may be that the quilter ran out of fabric, and used a scrap of

another fabric that, at the time, matched, but over the years the dyes have

aged differently. I have a turn of the century Carolina Lily where the

majority of the red flowers are now brown (fading of turkey red dyes,

presumably). Among the blocks that are still red, are several different

shades of red, leading me to believe the quilter was making do with whatever

red scraps she could find.

Jocelyn


Hello,

I am Sharon Newman, and all of the fabrics I have reproduced for Moda

have been taken from real fabrics. Some are in Eileen’s book. My Vintage

Garden swag is shown there. The whole line of Vintage Garden was taken

from one quilt that had multiple color ways of the prints and two prints

not in the quilt. My Cherished Pieces fabrics were done with fabrics in

my dating fabrics box. My Twenties Treasures were taken from a 1923 Iowa

Irish Chain and a hexagon oddfellow top. My Turn of the Century fabrics

are from some of my grandmothers quilts. I have seen my fabrics in Nancy

Martin’s Two Color Quilts book. Eleanor Burns used my fabrics in her

Stockings book. You will see my fabrics used in several books.

Sharon Newman

–=====================6871721==.ALT

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This is the Quilt History mailing list. For information on
members services, including subscription changes, visit our

website at http://www.QuiltHistory.com.

Date: Sat, 20 Feb 1999 23:07:13 EST
From: EllynLK@aol.com
To: QHL@cuenet.com
Subject: QHL: Looking For Ideas…
Message-ID: b25a6bce.36cf8671@aol.com
Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
I have been pulling out all of the antique “orphan” blocks that I’ve inherited
or found… just wondering what others of you have done to display these.
I’m going to be doing some redecorating in the spring and want to use these in
my decor. Just want to know what good ideas are out there to use these little
treasures in new and different ways.
Found one I forgot I had… found it a few years ago at a flea market. I
have no idea what pattern it is but I bought it because it has three paper
template pieces pinned to it. They were cut from an envelope and as fortune
would have it, there is a postmark! November 26, 1928 at 4:30 p.m. I would
like to somehow display this block along with the templates.
Ideas welcome!
Lauri Klobas

Pacific PaKarendes, California

Date: Sat, 20 Feb 1999 22:16:46 -0700
From: Eileen Trestain ejtrestain@earthlink.net
To: QHL@cuenet.com
Subject: QHL: underground RR book
Message-ID: 36CF96BE.DDC84A5E@earthlink.net
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
OKAY folks. I just can’t bite my tongue any more.
I bought the underground RR book, Hidden in Plain View. First, I have to
say up front that I believe in the likelihood that an Underground RR may
have used quilts in some manner to give directions, or memorize the way,
similar to a map. I bought the book believing this to be a possibility.
I believe the African American culture is/was wise in many more ways
that anyone ever gave them credit for at the time, and that their
resiliency of spirit is what helped them to survive in the most
appalling of conditions.
Now to the book itself. The original author of the book, Jaqueline
Tobin, met an African American woman selling quilts in a flea market in
South Carolina, and the woman hinted at the Underground RR legend, which
has been with us for years. Leaving aside the possibility that this
could have been a most delightful ploy for an elderly woman to sell her
quilts to a tourist, we assume she has told them an oral legend handed
down that nobody so far has been able to prove.
For the first 63 pages, we get to read the forward by not one, but three
people who I presume are well known for their knowledge of African
American history and African tribal history, as well as introductions by
both authors. One of these people is Cuesta Benberry, a highly respected
quilt historian.
Much of the first portion of the book itself is about African tribal
arts and history. The book makes a point that the African American
community has a long history of oral traditions. I understand that,
too. But every time I felt that approached the subject the book was
supposed to be about in the first half of the book, I felt like they
dodged, and danced, and never quite reached the subject I was interested
in.. the quilts.
the authors give a grouping of quilt blocks which the woman named as the
blocks that were used. Then they take us on a convoluted journey of how
they decided what the blocks may have meant in use. One of the ideas
which they have put forward was the Dresden plate pattern symbolizing a
town of Dresden Ohio. Does anyone know of any recorded history of the
pattern named as Dresden Plate in the 1800’s? Yes, the pattern existed
in c.1800 medallion quilts, where it is now named in England as a
Dahlia, but can anyone tell me how old the Dresden Plate name is? Yes,
Wagon Wheel patterns were in use. Why would the Wheel pattern lead them
to Dresden, Ohio?
Next, we come to how old spiritual songs relate to underground railroad
themes. And about the representational pictorial quilts of Harriet
Powers. But, so far, I fail to see a great relation to proving the
underground RR theme.
Now, to a more telling part, in my estimation. The photographs. Many of
the photographs are recently made quilts, made by the second author,
Raymond Dobard. Staged in scenic positions in old slave quarters, but
in bright modern colors, the quilts do stand out. However, it is the
quilts which are supposedly slave quilts, one which was “a exceptional
example of an early log cabin quilt that was made by a fugitive slave in
the 1840’s….” Though a terrible photo supplied by the museum, it
appears to be a classic C.1880 black silk quilt with considerable
damage. On the next page is another log cabin quilt which “is said to be
slave made. The date is given as 1830’s by it’s owner.” Here we have a
c.1830 quilt, complete with a nice strip of mourning print right up the
middle, at the front of the picture? It looks to me like a classic
c.1900 log cabin utility quilt, with a baptist fan quilt pattern
overall, and possibly a moderately thick to very thick batting, common
at that time. Even relative novices I have asked, out of curiosity, and
without leading the witness, as it were, have responded when asked “When
was this quilt made?” have said without hesitation “Turn of the
Century.”
A few pages later, we have a quilt, admittedly made in 1980, from the
MEMORY of a quilt owned by the maker in her childhood, but which was
destroyed by a fire. It features stars in a random pattern, and an
unusual quilting design, with some colored threads as some of the
quilting. This is supposed to be the topographical map of an unnamed
plantation, where the maker, who is still living, quite obviously never
lived during the years of slave incarceration.
On the following page, we have a quilt made by the Daughters Of Dorcas,
an African American Quilters Guild. This quilt was made in 1987-88, and
features several of the patterns listed by the elderly woman. (but who
DIDN’t use those same patterns in the 1980’s for their sampler quilts?)
It is convenient for the authors that the African American quilt maker,
Ozella Williams, passed away last fall, as there is no one left to
further question by any other person who might be interested, or who may
have been more through in their research. If I, at first glance, can
shoot holes in the dates of the quilts they tell us are very early
examples of Log cabin quilts, and this is what kind of knowledge and
research they have built their story around, it makes the rest of the
book look pretty shoddy.
I personally had hoped for some definite proof, or at least a decent
jumping off place. The best part of the book, in my opinion, is the
extensive bibliography on underground RR articles and books which we
find at the back of their book. If you want to know more about the
Underground RR, use that list. If you want to know about quilts from
the underground RR, this isn’t going to help you much.
Just my very personal opinion of this much discussed book.

Eileen

Date: Sat, 20 Feb 1999 22:29:23 -0700
From: Eileen Trestain ejtrestain@earthlink.net
To: QHL@cuenet.com
Subject: QHL: battings
Message-ID: 36CF99B3.6AC85FFE@earthlink.net
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
I guess I am on a soap box tonight.
There are a couple things to consider other than ease of quilting in
choosing battings.
Cotton and wool battings have a long history of survival. Polyester
doesn’t.
Cotton and Wool are very breathable, and are not so likely to trap
moisture under the quilt, so they feel cooler in the summer and warmer
in teh winter.
Wool and cotton are somewhat fire resistant, wool more than cotton. If
you see a burned quilt with a poly batting, you will never forget the
sight of how it burned , and melted. There is nothig quite like the
feel and sound of a smoked poly batting, which melts between the layers
of cotton top and lining, and crinkles and crackles as you handle it.
Rather eerie whan you think somebody might have been sleeping under it
as it melted.
I like Mountain Mist Blue Ribbon, probably because grandma would never
use anything else, and I like that traditional feel, and Hobbs Organic
if I want a bit more loft. I like way Hobbs wool feels, but I am afraid
to handle it too long, as I am allergic to wool, and don’t want to take
teh chance. I don’t quilt with it.
Eileen
Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 11:33:32 -0500
From: Nancy Roberts robertsn@norwich.net
To: QHL@cuenet.com
Subject: QHL: Story of reproduction fabric
Message-ID: 36D0355C.355D@norwich.net
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
For those interested in how reproduction fabric lines are designed, you might
check out Chiori Santiago’s article on the topic in The Fabric Special
Showcase, a special issue of Traditional Quiltworks magazine from Chitra
Publications. The article covers P&B Textile’s collection based on quilts
from the Oakland Museum. This issue is no longer on the newsstands, but back
issues can be purchased from the publisher if you missed it. The website is
http://www.QuiltTownUSA.com/ or you can call a credit card order at

800-628-8244. Nancy

Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 11:43:21 -0500
From: Alan Kelchner quiltfix@mail.jax.bellsouth.net
To: qhl@cuenet.com
Subject: QHL: should I buy?
Message-ID: 36D037A8.1BB803FD@mail.jax.bellsouth.net
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Liz, I have only one suggestion about your quilt – if it is something
that you dearly love, cannot stand the thought of not owning, you feel
the price is reasonable and you can afford it, then run (not walk) back
to the store and get the silly thing before someone else falls in
love!!!! I missed out on one (at that point too chicken to bid on ebay)
that I wish I had bought. Can’t get it out of my mind. But OTOH, if
it’s not screaming to come home, I won’t buy it. So I buy very few any
more. Would rather buy something that wants to come home with me. And
this does not mean that they are fancy and expensive. That is not
requisite. My most favorite one is a utilitarian piece that is worn (it
was filler for another, very ugly top). As for date, it’s not fair to
ask online (whimper-chinquiver). We have to see it. I will stick my neck
out far enough to guess at depression era, but that is not definite.
My suggestion is to buy and take it home. Love it as is, folded over a
chair that is infrequently used, so you can look at it. And never on
the couch – someone will inevitably snuggle under it. One of my first
jobs came from such an incident. The ladies daughter got under it and
was re-arranging the portion over her legs with her foot (don’t we all
before we sit up and use our hands?). Anyhow, the quilt was a fragile
pieceand, sure enough, her foot went straight through the center! It was
easily repaired, and (brag, brag) I couldn’t find the repair easily

myself (someone caught me photographing the wrong place – oops).

Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 11:56:07 -0500
From: Alan Kelchner quiltfix@mail.jax.bellsouth.net
To: qhl@cuenet.com
Subject: QHL: humility
Message-ID: 36D03AA6.24462DC5@mail.jax.bellsouth.net
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Someone may need to help me here – memory must be going. Watched
television the other night and my interest was piqued when the narrator
was talking about how these (3rd world men) would not make their (item)
perfect, as only Mohammed was perfect. This was on Discovery/TLC, and I
meant to remember everything, but …………
Wait, just remembered – It was PBS, “Antiques Roadshow”, and whichever
middle-eastern tribe had woven the rug they were appraising (the rug was
HUGE). The man appraising stated that they wouldn’t use matching dye
lots of yarn to create the piece, because only Mohammed was perfect and
capable of making perfection. And as the years went on, the dye lots
would fade differently, making the differences even more noticeable (the
rug in question had blue sections that were two different shades of the
same color). Of course, the flags went up in my brain because of the
connection to humility blocks in American quilts. I still think that the
original humility myths were to cover mistakes, but I also believe that
the romanticism of the legend led people to do this on purpose.
Now if I could remember the name of the woman I ran into last week. Used
to work with her, can remember the day she came in beaming because her
bosom looked bigger (new Wonder Bra), but it’s been a week and I’ll be
damned if I can remember her name! Must be a guy thing to remember her
chest and not her name (LOL) !

Alan

Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 13:27:36 EST
From: QuiltEvals@aol.com
To: QHL@cuenet.com
Subject: QHL: Re: Question about Quilter’s Heritage and more.
Message-ID: 6c465c1a.36d05018@aol.com
Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
In a message dated 2/20/99 6:51:25 PM Pacific Standard Time, QHL-Digest-
request@cuenet.com writes:
<<
Please tell us who is the Quilt Heritage Foundation. How does one become a
member. Who will be doing quilt appraisals. The lecture titles sound great!
Who
is giving which lecture?
Thank you.
Bobbie A. Aug

>
Yes, Nancy, I am curious about this as well?
Thanks,

Deborah Roberts

Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 11:27:40 -0700
From: “Jeanne.Fetzer” Jeanne.Fetzer@integrityonline3.com
To: “Eileen Trestain” ejtrestain@earthlink.net, QHL@cuenet.com
Subject: QHL: Re: underground RR book
Message-ID: <01b101be5dca$6741e020$36e399d0@jeanne.fetzer>
Content-Type: text/plain;
charset=”iso-8859-1″
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Thank you for taking the time to point out where you question the
authenticity of the Dobard book. All I want to say is, “Amen.” I don’t say
that to disprove anything, but to echo the need to look at information and
then ask questions. If we want quilt history to be taken seriously, we must
carefully research and support our findings based on fact.
Thank you, thank you!

Jeanne Fetzer

Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 13:36:17 EST
From: QuiltEvals@aol.com
To: QHL@cuenet.com
Subject: QHL: More on Reproductions
Message-ID: 3ad0c564.36d05221@aol.com
Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
Yesterday, I had the privilege of seeing the strike offs for a new “1840’s”
line by Pat Nickols….Pat, I hope it was okay to tell, I just had to share
the news. The line is exciting….very accurate in detail and color. Of
course, there are the original colors and added color ways as well, but they
are all WONDERFUL! We were able to compare a few of the original fabrics
to the repros. Pat, like Sharon Newman has taken actual prints from quilts
and fabrics in her collection. This seems to be the way to do it – at least
for these two. The line is being produced by P&B and should be available in
late Spring, Pat will be introducing it at Quilt Market this May.
Sorry, I don’t usually do this, and I don’t mean to sound like a commercial,
but when you see them you will understand my excitement.
Deborah Roberts

Costa Mesa, CA

Date: Sun, 21 Feb 99 16:22:48 EST
From: “Bob Mills” decision@tigger.jvnc.net
To: “Quilter’s Heritage List” QHL@cuenet.com
Subject: QHL: Orvus
Message-ID: decision.1270019808E@tigger.jvnc.net
To Jennifer and others:
In the East, Agway which is a retail store and nursery catering to area
farmers and yuppies, sells Orvus and it is not special order.
I just bought a container of 7 1/2 pounds for $19.95 and my quilt store
orvis is 8 oz. for $4.99. You need to find something like a feedstore or
farmers co-op. I live in a very suburban area of NJ but am lucky we still
have these stores. And my quilts are getting very clean.
About a year or so ago I went into Agway and was told they were sold out.
Mrs. G. is washing all her sheep this week!
Jan Drechsler (not Bob)

http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/bobmills/jan.html

Date: Sun, 21 Feb 99 16:22:47 EST
From: “Bob Mills” decision@tigger.jvnc.net
To: “Quilter’s Heritage List” QHL@cuenet.com
Subject: QHL: Repro fabrics
Message-ID: decision.1270019807D@tigger.jvnc.net
Just a word of thanks on the repro fabric information. Already I have
learned a lot!
Jan Drechsler (not Bob)

http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/bobmills/jan.html

Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 16:34:18 EST
From: Kathi2174@aol.com
To: quiltfix@mail.jax.bellsouth.net
Cc: qhl@cuenet.com
Subject: Re: QHL: humility
Message-ID: 5aef56f6.36d07bda@aol.com
Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
Alan,
I did get to see wool yarn being dyed in the bazaar in Herat, Afghanistan in

  1. I’m sure the methods had not changed in centuries. The term for the
    streakiness in the color is “abrash.” It is a word of Turkish origin, that
    originally meant the dappled or speckled colors on horses. It has long been
    used to refer to the variation in saturation/hue in yarns used to weave rugs.
    It’s caused in two ways: 1. By crude (not bad, just primitive) technology
    used by dyers doing up a single batch. The second is by reusing the dye-bath.
    The second and third uses have less pigment, therefore give varying shades.
    Not much to do with quilts, is it? Unless we relate the “use what you have “
    concept to explain variations in techniques in stead of the romantic lack of
    perfection notion.
    Off the soap box!
    Kathi in Calif.

Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 15:21:09 -0800
From: “Christine Thresh” christine@winnowing.com
To: QHL@cuenet.com
Subject: QHL: I read Hidden in Plain View
Message-Id: 199902212322.PAA00834@server.cctrap.com
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Tilde’s post asked for input from those who read the book, Hidden in Plain
View.

I read the book and was disappointed. The story told by the old African
American woman was interesting, but the book did nothing to really back it
up. There were lots of references to African textiles and Masonic symbols,
but they did not seem to tie in with the story told by the quilter. The
books I own about quilting patterns led me to believe many of the patterns
she said were in the quilt “map” were not in usage at the time of the
Underground Railroad. The author of Hidden stated that she obtained the
information
from the quilter in one three hour session.
Christine Thresh
http://www.winnowing.com

Christine Thresh

http://www.winnowing.com/

Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 20:00:30 -0500 (EST)
From: JOCELYNM@delphi.com
To: QHL@cuenet.com, QHL-Digest@cuenet.com
Subject: QHL-Digest Digest V99 #50
Message-id: 01J80NAUQJ3C9C87GT@delphi.com
Content-type: TEXT/PLAIN; CHARSET=US-ASCII
On 20-FEB-1999 21:53:29.5 QHL said to JOCELYNM

Well, for my two cents, I supported the decision of the (A)IQA to
have only quilts that had not been exhibited elsewhere. There are so
many wonderful quilts out there that it is good to see different
quilts at the different shows instead of quilts “making the rounds”.
Jean Ann,
It was my understanding, however, that this rule applied to things like
entering our quilts in our local quilt shows, the county fair, etc. The talk
here was how it was going to ‘dumb down’ local shows, if the very best
quilters held out their work for the big shows…plus, if a quilt could only
be shown once, that seems like a shame!
OTOH, I really hate to go to a show and see things I’ve seen before. So
I don’t know what the happy balance is…
seen on samplers where the maker cross-stitches the letter Z backwards
so as not to offend God by making a perfect piece and have thought the
practice might carry over to quilting.
Jill,
I once spoke with a ‘plain’ quilter who said that it would be an
affront to God to deliberately put in a mistake, because that would mean you
thought you HAD achieved perfection up to that point! I don’t know if
that were the teachings of her sect, or her personal opinion, though.
Anyway, the quilt has what I would call a humility block in the lower
right hand side of the quilt. The “mistake on purpose” is that the
flowers are a totally different color than the rest of the quilt. It
This may be that the quilter ran out of fabric, and used a scrap of
another fabric that, at the time, matched, but over the years the dyes have
aged differently. I have a turn of the century Carolina Lily where the
majority of the red flowers are now brown (fading of turkey red dyes,
presumably). Among the blocks that are still red, are several different
shades of red, leading me to believe the quilter was making do with whatever
red scraps she could find.

Jocelyn

Hello,
I am Sharon Newman, and all of the fabrics I have reproduced for Moda
have been taken from real fabrics. Some are in Eileen’s book. My Vintage
Garden swag is shown there. The whole line of Vintage Garden was taken
from one quilt that had multiple color ways of the prints and two prints
not in the quilt. My Cherished Pieces fabrics were done with fabrics in
my dating fabrics box. My Twenties Treasures were taken from a 1923 Iowa
Irish Chain and a hexagon oddfellow top. My Turn of the Century fabrics
are from some of my grandmothers quilts. I have seen my fabrics in Nancy
Martin’s Two Color Quilts book. Eleanor Burns used my fabrics in her
Stockings book. You will see my fabrics used in several books.
Sharon Newman

Date: Sat, 20 Feb 1999 23:07:13 EST

From: EllynLK@aol.com

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: Looking For Ideas…

Message-ID: b25a6bce.36cf8671@aol.com

Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII

Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit

I have been pulling out all of the antique “orphan” blocks that I’ve

inherited

or found… just wondering what others of you have done to display these.

I’m going to be doing some redecorating in the spring and want to use these

in

my decor. Just want to know what good ideas are out there to use these little

treasures in new and different ways.

Found one I forgot I had… found it a few years ago at a flea market. I

have no idea what pattern it is but I bought it because it has three paper

template pieces pinned to it. They were cut from an envelope and as fortune

would have it, there is a postmark! November 26, 1928 at 4:30 p.m. I would

like to somehow display this block along with the templates.

Ideas welcome!

Lauri Klobas

Pacific PaKarendes, California


Date: Sat, 20 Feb 1999 22:16:46 -0700

From: Eileen Trestain ejtrestain@earthlink.net

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: underground RR book

Message-ID: 36CF96BE.DDC84A5E@earthlink.net

Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii

Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

OKAY folks. I just can’t bite my tongue any more.

I bought the underground RR book, Hidden in Plain View. First, I have to

say up front that I believe in the likelihood that an Underground RR may

have used quilts in some manner to give directions, or memorize the way,

similar to a map. I bought the book believing this to be a possibility.

I believe the African American culture is/was wise in many more ways

that anyone ever gave them credit for at the time, and that their

resiliency of spirit is what helped them to survive in the most

appalling of conditions.

Now to the book itself. The original author of the book, Jaqueline

Tobin, met an African American woman selling quilts in a flea market in

South Carolina, and the woman hinted at the Underground RR legend, which

has been with us for years. Leaving aside the possibility that this

could have been a most delightful ploy for an elderly woman to sell her

quilts to a tourist, we assume she has told them an oral legend handed

down that nobody so far has been able to prove.

For the first 63 pages, we get to read the forward by not one, but three

people who I presume are well known for their knowledge of African

American history and African tribal history, as well as introductions by

both authors. One of these people is Cuesta Benberry, a highly respected

quilt historian.

Much of the first portion of the book itself is about African tribal

arts and history. The book makes a point that the African American

community has a long history of oral traditions. I understand that,

too. But every time I felt that approached the subject the book was

supposed to be about in the first half of the book, I felt like they

dodged, and danced, and never quite reached the subject I was interested

in.. the quilts.

the authors give a grouping of quilt blocks which the woman named as the

blocks that were used. Then they take us on a convoluted journey of how

they decided what the blocks may have meant in use. One of the ideas

which they have put forward was the Dresden plate pattern symbolizing a

town of Dresden Ohio. Does anyone know of any recorded history of the

pattern named as Dresden Plate in the 1800’s? Yes, the pattern existed

in c.1800 medallion quilts, where it is now named in England as a

Dahlia, but can anyone tell me how old the Dresden Plate name is? Yes,

Wagon Wheel patterns were in use. Why would the Wheel pattern lead them

to Dresden, Ohio?

Next, we come to how old spiritual songs relate to underground railroad

themes. And about the representational pictorial quilts of Harriet

Powers. But, so far, I fail to see a great relation to proving the

underground RR theme.

Now, to a more telling part, in my estimation. The photographs. Many of

the photographs are recently made quilts, made by the second author,

Raymond Dobard. Staged in scenic positions in old slave quarters, but

in bright modern colors, the quilts do stand out. However, it is the

quilts which are supposedly slave quilts, one which was “a exceptional

example of an early log cabin quilt that was made by a fugitive slave in

the 1840’s….” Though a terrible photo supplied by the museum, it

appears to be a classic C.1880 black silk quilt with considerable

damage. On the next page is another log cabin quilt which “is said to be

slave made. The date is given as 1830’s by it’s owner.” Here we have a

c.1830 quilt, complete with a nice strip of mourning print right up the

middle, at the front of the picture? It looks to me like a classic

c.1900 log cabin utility quilt, with a baptist fan quilt pattern

overall, and possibly a moderately thick to very thick batting, common

at that time. Even relative novices I have asked, out of curiosity, and

without leading the witness, as it were, have responded when asked “When

was this quilt made?” have said without hesitation “Turn of the

Century.”

A few pages later, we have a quilt, admittedly made in 1980, from the

MEMORY of a quilt owned by the maker in her childhood, but which was

destroyed by a fire. It features stars in a random pattern, and an

unusual quilting design, with some colored threads as some of the

quilting. This is supposed to be the topographical map of an unnamed

plantation, where the maker, who is still living, quite obviously never

lived during the years of slave incarceration.

On the following page, we have a quilt made by the Daughters Of Dorcas,

an African American Quilters Guild. This quilt was made in 1987-88, and

features several of the patterns listed by the elderly woman. (but who

DIDN’t use those same patterns in the 1980’s for their sampler quilts?)

It is convenient for the authors that the African American quilt maker,

Ozella Williams, passed away last fall, as there is no one left to

further question by any other person who might be interested, or who may

have been more through in their research. If I, at first glance, can

shoot holes in the dates of the quilts they tell us are very early

examples of Log cabin quilts, and this is what kind of knowledge and

research they have built their story around, it makes the rest of the

book look pretty shoddy.

I personally had hoped for some definite proof, or at least a decent

jumping off place. The best part of the book, in my opinion, is the

extensive bibliography on underground RR articles and books which we

find at the back of their book. If you want to know more about the

Underground RR, use that list. If you want to know about quilts from

the underground RR, this isn’t going to help you much.

Just my very personal opinion of this much discussed book.

Eileen


Date: Sat, 20 Feb 1999 22:29:23 -0700

From: Eileen Trestain ejtrestain@earthlink.net

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: battings

Message-ID: 36CF99B3.6AC85FFE@earthlink.net

Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii

Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

I guess I am on a soap box tonight.

There are a couple things to consider other than ease of quilting in

choosing battings.

Cotton and wool battings have a long history of survival. Polyester

doesn’t.

Cotton and Wool are very breathable, and are not so likely to trap

moisture under the quilt, so they feel cooler in the summer and warmer

in teh winter.

Wool and cotton are somewhat fire resistant, wool more than cotton. If

you see a burned quilt with a poly batting, you will never forget the

sight of how it burned , and melted. There is nothig quite like the

feel and sound of a smoked poly batting, which melts between the layers

of cotton top and lining, and crinkles and crackles as you handle it.

Rather eerie whan you think somebody might have been sleeping under it

as it melted.

I like Mountain Mist Blue Ribbon, probably because grandma would never

use anything else, and I like that traditional feel, and Hobbs Organic

if I want a bit more loft. I like way Hobbs wool feels, but I am afraid

to handle it too long, as I am allergic to wool, and don’t want to take

teh chance. I don’t quilt with it.

Eileen

Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 11:33:32 -0500

From: Nancy Roberts robertsn@norwich.net

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: Story of reproduction fabric

Message-ID: 36D0355C.355D@norwich.net

Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii

Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

For those interested in how reproduction fabric lines are designed, you might

check out Chiori Santiago’s article on the topic in The Fabric Special

Showcase, a special issue of Traditional Quiltworks magazine from Chitra

Publications. The article covers P&B Textile’s collection based on quilts

from the Oakland Museum. This issue is no longer on the newsstands, but back

issues can be purchased from the publisher if you missed it. The website is

http://www.QuiltTownUSA.com/ or you can call a credit card order at

800-628-8244. Nancy


Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 11:43:21 -0500

From: Alan Kelchner quiltfix@mail.jax.bellsouth.net

To: qhl@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: should I buy?

Message-ID: 36D037A8.1BB803FD@mail.jax.bellsouth.net

Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii

Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

Liz, I have only one suggestion about your quilt – if it is something

that you dearly love, cannot stand the thought of not owning, you feel

the price is reasonable and you can afford it, then run (not walk) back

to the store and get the silly thing before someone else falls in

love!!!! I missed out on one (at that point too chicken to bid on ebay)

that I wish I had bought. Can’t get it out of my mind. But OTOH, if

it’s not screaming to come home, I won’t buy it. So I buy very few any

more. Would rather buy something that wants to come home with me. And

this does not mean that they are fancy and expensive. That is not

requisite. My most favorite one is a utilitarian piece that is worn (it

was filler for another, very ugly top). As for date, it’s not fair to

ask online (whimper-chinquiver). We have to see it. I will stick my neck

out far enough to guess at depression era, but that is not definite.

My suggestion is to buy and take it home. Love it as is, folded over a

chair that is infrequently used, so you can look at it. And never on

the couch – someone will inevitably snuggle under it. One of my first

jobs came from such an incident. The ladies daughter got under it and

was re-arranging the portion over her legs with her foot (don’t we all

before we sit up and use our hands?). Anyhow, the quilt was a fragile

pieceand, sure enough, her foot went straight through the center! It was

easily repaired, and (brag, brag) I couldn’t find the repair easily

myself (someone caught me photographing the wrong place – oops).


Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 11:56:07 -0500

From: Alan Kelchner quiltfix@mail.jax.bellsouth.net

To: qhl@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: humility

Message-ID: 36D03AA6.24462DC5@mail.jax.bellsouth.net

Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii

Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

Someone may need to help me here – memory must be going. Watched

television the other night and my interest was piqued when the narrator

was talking about how these (3rd world men) would not make their (item)

perfect, as only Mohammed was perfect. This was on Discovery/TLC, and I

meant to remember everything, but …………

Wait, just remembered – It was PBS, “Antiques Roadshow”, and whichever

middle-eastern tribe had woven the rug they were appraising (the rug was

HUGE). The man appraising stated that they wouldn’t use matching dye

lots of yarn to create the piece, because only Mohammed was perfect and

capable of making perfection. And as the years went on, the dye lots

would fade differently, making the differences even more noticeable (the

rug in question had blue sections that were two different shades of the

same color). Of course, the flags went up in my brain because of the

connection to humility blocks in American quilts. I still think that the

original humility myths were to cover mistakes, but I also believe that

the romanticism of the legend led people to do this on purpose.

Now if I could remember the name of the woman I ran into last week. Used

to work with her, can remember the day she came in beaming because her

bosom looked bigger (new Wonder Bra), but it’s been a week and I’ll be

damned if I can remember her name! Must be a guy thing to remember her

chest and not her name (LOL) !

Alan


Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 13:27:36 EST

From: QuiltEvals@aol.com

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: Re: Question about Quilter’s Heritage and more.

Message-ID: 6c465c1a.36d05018@aol.com

Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII

Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit

In a message dated 2/20/99 6:51:25 PM Pacific Standard Time, QHL-Digest-

request@cuenet.com writes:

<<

Please tell us who is the Quilt Heritage Foundation. How does one become a

member. Who will be doing quilt appraisals. The lecture titles sound great!

Who

is giving which lecture?

Thank you.

Bobbie A. Aug

>

Yes, Nancy, I am curious about this as well?

Thanks,

Deborah Roberts


Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 11:27:40 -0700

From: “Jeanne.Fetzer” Jeanne.Fetzer@integrityonline3.com

To: “Eileen Trestain” ejtrestain@earthlink.net, QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: Re: underground RR book

Message-ID: <01b101be5dca$6741e020$36e399d0@jeanne.fetzer>

Content-Type: text/plain;

charset=”iso-8859-1″

Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

Thank you for taking the time to point out where you question the

authenticity of the Dobard book. All I want to say is, “Amen.” I don’t say

that to disprove anything, but to echo the need to look at information and

then ask questions. If we want quilt history to be taken seriously, we must

carefully research and support our findings based on fact.

Thank you, thank you!

Jeanne Fetzer


Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 13:36:17 EST

From: QuiltEvals@aol.com

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: More on Reproductions

Message-ID: 3ad0c564.36d05221@aol.com

Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII

Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit

Yesterday, I had the privilege of seeing the strike offs for a new “1840’s”

line by Pat Nickols….Pat, I hope it was okay to tell, I just had to share

the news. The line is exciting….very accurate in detail and color. Of

course, there are the original colors and added color ways as well, but they

are all WONDERFUL! We were able to compare a few of the original fabrics

to the repros. Pat, like Sharon Newman has taken actual prints from quilts

and fabrics in her collection. This seems to be the way to do it – at least

for these two. The line is being produced by P&B and should be available in

late Spring, Pat will be introducing it at Quilt Market this May.

Sorry, I don’t usually do this, and I don’t mean to sound like a commercial,

but when you see them you will understand my excitement.

Deborah Roberts

Costa Mesa, CA


Date: Sun, 21 Feb 99 16:22:48 EST

From: “Bob Mills” decision@tigger.jvnc.net

To: “Quilter’s Heritage List” QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: Orvus

Message-ID: decision.1270019808E@tigger.jvnc.net

To Jennifer and others:

In the East, Agway which is a retail store and nursery catering to area

farmers and yuppies, sells Orvus and it is not special order.

I just bought a container of 7 1/2 pounds for $19.95 and my quilt store

orvis is 8 oz. for $4.99. You need to find something like a feedstore or

farmers co-op. I live in a very suburban area of NJ but am lucky we still

have these stores. And my quilts are getting very clean.

About a year or so ago I went into Agway and was told they were sold out.

Mrs. G. is washing all her sheep this week!

Jan Drechsler (not Bob)

http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/bobmills/jan.html

Date: Sun, 21 Feb 99 16:22:47 EST

From: “Bob Mills” decision@tigger.jvnc.net

To: “Quilter’s Heritage List” QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: Repro fabrics

Message-ID: decision.1270019807D@tigger.jvnc.net

Just a word of thanks on the repro fabric information. Already I have

learned a lot!

Jan Drechsler (not Bob)

http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/bobmills/jan.html

Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 16:34:18 EST

From: Kathi2174@aol.com

To: quiltfix@mail.jax.bellsouth.net

Cc: qhl@cuenet.com

Subject: Re: QHL: humility

Message-ID: 5aef56f6.36d07bda@aol.com

Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII

Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit

Alan,

I did get to see wool yarn being dyed in the bazaar in Herat, Afghanistan in

  1. I’m sure the methods had not changed in centuries. The term for the

streakiness in the color is “abrash.” It is a word of Turkish origin, that

originally meant the dappled or speckled colors on horses. It has long been

used to refer to the variation in saturation/hue in yarns used to weave rugs.

It’s caused in two ways: 1. By crude (not bad, just primitive) technology

used by dyers doing up a single batch. The second is by reusing the dye-bath.

The second and third uses have less pigment, therefore give varying shades.

Not much to do with quilts, is it? Unless we relate the “use what you have “

concept to explain variations in techniques in stead of the romantic lack of

perfection notion.

Off the soap box!

Kathi in Calif.

Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 15:21:09 -0800

From: “Christine Thresh” christine@winnowing.com

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: I read Hidden in Plain View

Message-Id: 199902212322.PAA00834@server.cctrap.com

Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1

Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

Tilde’s post asked for input from those who read the book, Hidden in Plain

View.

I read the book and was disappointed. The story told by the old African

American woman was interesting, but the book did nothing to really back it

up. There were lots of references to African textiles and Masonic symbols,

but they did not seem to tie in with the story told by the quilter. The

books I own about quilting patterns led me to believe many of the patterns

she said were in the quilt “map” were not in usage at the time of the

Underground Railroad. The author of Hidden stated that she obtained the

information

from the quilter in one three hour session.

Christine Thresh

http://www.winnowing.com

Christine Thresh

http://www.winnowing.com/


Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 20:00:30 -0500 (EST)

From: JOCELYNM@delphi.com

To: QHL@cuenet.com, QHL-Digest@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL-Digest Digest V99 #50

Message-id: 01J80NAUQJ3C9C87GT@delphi.com

Content-type: TEXT/PLAIN; CHARSET=US-ASCII

On 20-FEB-1999 21:53:29.5 QHL said to JOCELYNM

Well, for my two cents, I supported the decision of the (A)IQA to

have only quilts that had not been exhibited elsewhere. There are so

many wonderful quilts out there that it is good to see different

quilts at the different shows instead of quilts “making the rounds”.

Jean Ann,

It was my understanding, however, that this rule applied to things like

entering our quilts in our local quilt shows, the county fair, etc. The talk

here was how it was going to ‘dumb down’ local shows, if the very best

quilters held out their work for the big shows…plus, if a quilt could only

be shown once, that seems like a shame!

OTOH, I really hate to go to a show and see things I’ve seen before. So

I don’t know what the happy balance is…

seen on samplers where the maker cross-stitches the letter Z backwards

so as not to offend God by making a perfect piece and have thought the

practice might carry over to quilting.

Jill,

I once spoke with a ‘plain’ quilter who said that it would be an

affront to God to deliberately put in a mistake, because that would mean you

thought you HAD achieved perfection up to that point! I don’t know if

that were the teachings of her sect, or her personal opinion, though.

Anyway, the quilt has what I would call a humility block in the lower

right hand side of the quilt. The “mistake on purpose” is that the

flowers are a totally different color than the rest of the quilt. It

This may be that the quilter ran out of fabric, and used a scrap of

another fabric that, at the time, matched, but over the years the dyes have

aged differently. I have a turn of the century Carolina Lily where the

majority of the red flowers are now brown (fading of turkey red dyes,

presumably). Among the blocks that are still red, are several different

shades of red, leading me to believe the quilter was making do with whatever

red scraps she could find.

Jocelyn


Hello,

I am Sharon Newman, and all of the fabrics I have reproduced for Moda

have been taken from real fabrics. Some are in Eileen’s book. My Vintage

Garden swag is shown there. The whole line of Vintage Garden was taken

from one quilt that had multiple color ways of the prints and two prints

not in the quilt. My Cherished Pieces fabrics were done with fabrics in

my dating fabrics box. My Twenties Treasures were taken from a 1923 Iowa

Irish Chain and a hexagon oddfellow top. My Turn of the Century fabrics

are from some of my grandmothers quilts. I have seen my fabrics in Nancy

Martin’s Two Color Quilts book. Eleanor Burns used my fabrics in her

Stockings book. You will see my fabrics used in several books.

Sharon Newman

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This is the Quilt History mailing list. For information on
members services, including subscription changes, visit our

website at http://www.QuiltHistory.com.

Date: Sat, 20 Feb 1999 23:07:13 EST
From: EllynLK@aol.com
To: QHL@cuenet.com
Subject: QHL: Looking For Ideas…
Message-ID: b25a6bce.36cf8671@aol.com
Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
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I have been pulling out all of the antique “orphan” blocks that I’ve inherited
or found… just wondering what others of you have done to display these.
I’m going to be doing some redecorating in the spring and want to use these in
my decor. Just want to know what good ideas are out there to use these little
treasures in new and different ways.
Found one I forgot I had… found it a few years ago at a flea market. I
have no idea what pattern it is but I bought it because it has three paper
template pieces pinned to it. They were cut from an envelope and as fortune
would have it, there is a postmark! November 26, 1928 at 4:30 p.m. I would
like to somehow display this block along with the templates.
Ideas welcome!
Lauri Klobas

Pacific PaKarendes, California

Date: Sat, 20 Feb 1999 22:16:46 -0700
From: Eileen Trestain ejtrestain@earthlink.net
To: QHL@cuenet.com
Subject: QHL: underground RR book
Message-ID: 36CF96BE.DDC84A5E@earthlink.net
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
OKAY folks. I just can’t bite my tongue any more.
I bought the underground RR book, Hidden in Plain View. First, I have to
say up front that I believe in the likelihood that an Underground RR may
have used quilts in some manner to give directions, or memorize the way,
similar to a map. I bought the book believing this to be a possibility.
I believe the African American culture is/was wise in many more ways
that anyone ever gave them credit for at the time, and that their
resiliency of spirit is what helped them to survive in the most
appalling of conditions.
Now to the book itself. The original author of the book, Jaqueline
Tobin, met an African American woman selling quilts in a flea market in
South Carolina, and the woman hinted at the Underground RR legend, which
has been with us for years. Leaving aside the possibility that this
could have been a most delightful ploy for an elderly woman to sell her
quilts to a tourist, we assume she has told them an oral legend handed
down that nobody so far has been able to prove.
For the first 63 pages, we get to read the forward by not one, but three
people who I presume are well known for their knowledge of African
American history and African tribal history, as well as introductions by
both authors. One of these people is Cuesta Benberry, a highly respected
quilt historian.
Much of the first portion of the book itself is about African tribal
arts and history. The book makes a point that the African American
community has a long history of oral traditions. I understand that,
too. But every time I felt that approached the subject the book was
supposed to be about in the first half of the book, I felt like they
dodged, and danced, and never quite reached the subject I was interested
in.. the quilts.
the authors give a grouping of quilt blocks which the woman named as the
blocks that were used. Then they take us on a convoluted journey of how
they decided what the blocks may have meant in use. One of the ideas
which they have put forward was the Dresden plate pattern symbolizing a
town of Dresden Ohio. Does anyone know of any recorded history of the
pattern named as Dresden Plate in the 1800’s? Yes, the pattern existed
in c.1800 medallion quilts, where it is now named in England as a
Dahlia, but can anyone tell me how old the Dresden Plate name is? Yes,
Wagon Wheel patterns were in use. Why would the Wheel pattern lead them
to Dresden, Ohio?
Next, we come to how old spiritual songs relate to underground railroad
themes. And about the representational pictorial quilts of Harriet
Powers. But, so far, I fail to see a great relation to proving the
underground RR theme.
Now, to a more telling part, in my estimation. The photographs. Many of
the photographs are recently made quilts, made by the second author,
Raymond Dobard. Staged in scenic positions in old slave quarters, but
in bright modern colors, the quilts do stand out. However, it is the
quilts which are supposedly slave quilts, one which was “a exceptional
example of an early log cabin quilt that was made by a fugitive slave in
the 1840’s….” Though a terrible photo supplied by the museum, it
appears to be a classic C.1880 black silk quilt with considerable
damage. On the next page is another log cabin quilt which “is said to be
slave made. The date is given as 1830’s by it’s owner.” Here we have a
c.1830 quilt, complete with a nice strip of mourning print right up the
middle, at the front of the picture? It looks to me like a classic
c.1900 log cabin utility quilt, with a baptist fan quilt pattern
overall, and possibly a moderately thick to very thick batting, common
at that time. Even relative novices I have asked, out of curiosity, and
without leading the witness, as it were, have responded when asked “When
was this quilt made?” have said without hesitation “Turn of the
Century.”
A few pages later, we have a quilt, admittedly made in 1980, from the
MEMORY of a quilt owned by the maker in her childhood, but which was
destroyed by a fire. It features stars in a random pattern, and an
unusual quilting design, with some colored threads as some of the
quilting. This is supposed to be the topographical map of an unnamed
plantation, where the maker, who is still living, quite obviously never
lived during the years of slave incarceration.
On the following page, we have a quilt made by the Daughters Of Dorcas,
an African American Quilters Guild. This quilt was made in 1987-88, and
features several of the patterns listed by the elderly woman. (but who
DIDN’t use those same patterns in the 1980’s for their sampler quilts?)
It is convenient for the authors that the African American quilt maker,
Ozella Williams, passed away last fall, as there is no one left to
further question by any other person who might be interested, or who may
have been more through in their research. If I, at first glance, can
shoot holes in the dates of the quilts they tell us are very early
examples of Log cabin quilts, and this is what kind of knowledge and
research they have built their story around, it makes the rest of the
book look pretty shoddy.
I personally had hoped for some definite proof, or at least a decent
jumping off place. The best part of the book, in my opinion, is the
extensive bibliography on underground RR articles and books which we
find at the back of their book. If you want to know more about the
Underground RR, use that list. If you want to know about quilts from
the underground RR, this isn’t going to help you much.
Just my very personal opinion of this much discussed book.

Eileen

Date: Sat, 20 Feb 1999 22:29:23 -0700
From: Eileen Trestain ejtrestain@earthlink.net
To: QHL@cuenet.com
Subject: QHL: battings
Message-ID: 36CF99B3.6AC85FFE@earthlink.net
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I guess I am on a soap box tonight.
There are a couple things to consider other than ease of quilting in
choosing battings.
Cotton and wool battings have a long history of survival. Polyester
doesn’t.
Cotton and Wool are very breathable, and are not so likely to trap
moisture under the quilt, so they feel cooler in the summer and warmer
in teh winter.
Wool and cotton are somewhat fire resistant, wool more than cotton. If
you see a burned quilt with a poly batting, you will never forget the
sight of how it burned , and melted. There is nothig quite like the
feel and sound of a smoked poly batting, which melts between the layers
of cotton top and lining, and crinkles and crackles as you handle it.
Rather eerie whan you think somebody might have been sleeping under it
as it melted.
I like Mountain Mist Blue Ribbon, probably because grandma would never
use anything else, and I like that traditional feel, and Hobbs Organic
if I want a bit more loft. I like way Hobbs wool feels, but I am afraid
to handle it too long, as I am allergic to wool, and don’t want to take
teh chance. I don’t quilt with it.
Eileen
Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 11:33:32 -0500
From: Nancy Roberts robertsn@norwich.net
To: QHL@cuenet.com
Subject: QHL: Story of reproduction fabric
Message-ID: 36D0355C.355D@norwich.net
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For those interested in how reproduction fabric lines are designed, you might
check out Chiori Santiago’s article on the topic in The Fabric Special
Showcase, a special issue of Traditional Quiltworks magazine from Chitra
Publications. The article covers P&B Textile’s collection based on quilts
from the Oakland Museum. This issue is no longer on the newsstands, but back
issues can be purchased from the publisher if you missed it. The website is
http://www.QuiltTownUSA.com/ or you can call a credit card order at

800-628-8244. Nancy

Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 11:43:21 -0500
From: Alan Kelchner quiltfix@mail.jax.bellsouth.net
To: qhl@cuenet.com
Subject: QHL: should I buy?
Message-ID: 36D037A8.1BB803FD@mail.jax.bellsouth.net
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
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Liz, I have only one suggestion about your quilt – if it is something
that you dearly love, cannot stand the thought of not owning, you feel
the price is reasonable and you can afford it, then run (not walk) back
to the store and get the silly thing before someone else falls in
love!!!! I missed out on one (at that point too chicken to bid on ebay)
that I wish I had bought. Can’t get it out of my mind. But OTOH, if
it’s not screaming to come home, I won’t buy it. So I buy very few any
more. Would rather buy something that wants to come home with me. And
this does not mean that they are fancy and expensive. That is not
requisite. My most favorite one is a utilitarian piece that is worn (it
was filler for another, very ugly top). As for date, it’s not fair to
ask online (whimper-chinquiver). We have to see it. I will stick my neck
out far enough to guess at depression era, but that is not definite.
My suggestion is to buy and take it home. Love it as is, folded over a
chair that is infrequently used, so you can look at it. And never on
the couch – someone will inevitably snuggle under it. One of my first
jobs came from such an incident. The ladies daughter got under it and
was re-arranging the portion over her legs with her foot (don’t we all
before we sit up and use our hands?). Anyhow, the quilt was a fragile
pieceand, sure enough, her foot went straight through the center! It was
easily repaired, and (brag, brag) I couldn’t find the repair easily

myself (someone caught me photographing the wrong place – oops).

Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 11:56:07 -0500
From: Alan Kelchner quiltfix@mail.jax.bellsouth.net
To: qhl@cuenet.com
Subject: QHL: humility
Message-ID: 36D03AA6.24462DC5@mail.jax.bellsouth.net
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Someone may need to help me here – memory must be going. Watched
television the other night and my interest was piqued when the narrator
was talking about how these (3rd world men) would not make their (item)
perfect, as only Mohammed was perfect. This was on Discovery/TLC, and I
meant to remember everything, but …………
Wait, just remembered – It was PBS, “Antiques Roadshow”, and whichever
middle-eastern tribe had woven the rug they were appraising (the rug was
HUGE). The man appraising stated that they wouldn’t use matching dye
lots of yarn to create the piece, because only Mohammed was perfect and
capable of making perfection. And as the years went on, the dye lots
would fade differently, making the differences even more noticeable (the
rug in question had blue sections that were two different shades of the
same color). Of course, the flags went up in my brain because of the
connection to humility blocks in American quilts. I still think that the
original humility myths were to cover mistakes, but I also believe that
the romanticism of the legend led people to do this on purpose.
Now if I could remember the name of the woman I ran into last week. Used
to work with her, can remember the day she came in beaming because her
bosom looked bigger (new Wonder Bra), but it’s been a week and I’ll be
damned if I can remember her name! Must be a guy thing to remember her
chest and not her name (LOL) !

Alan

Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 13:27:36 EST
From: QuiltEvals@aol.com
To: QHL@cuenet.com
Subject: QHL: Re: Question about Quilter’s Heritage and more.
Message-ID: 6c465c1a.36d05018@aol.com
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In a message dated 2/20/99 6:51:25 PM Pacific Standard Time, QHL-Digest-
request@cuenet.com writes:
<<
Please tell us who is the Quilt Heritage Foundation. How does one become a
member. Who will be doing quilt appraisals. The lecture titles sound great!
Who
is giving which lecture?
Thank you.
Bobbie A. Aug

>
Yes, Nancy, I am curious about this as well?
Thanks,

Deborah Roberts

Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 11:27:40 -0700
From: “Jeanne.Fetzer” Jeanne.Fetzer@integrityonline3.com
To: “Eileen Trestain” ejtrestain@earthlink.net, QHL@cuenet.com
Subject: QHL: Re: underground RR book
Message-ID: <01b101be5dca$6741e020$36e399d0@jeanne.fetzer>
Content-Type: text/plain;
charset=”iso-8859-1″
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Thank you for taking the time to point out where you question the
authenticity of the Dobard book. All I want to say is, “Amen.” I don’t say
that to disprove anything, but to echo the need to look at information and
then ask questions. If we want quilt history to be taken seriously, we must
carefully research and support our findings based on fact.
Thank you, thank you!

Jeanne Fetzer

Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 13:36:17 EST
From: QuiltEvals@aol.com
To: QHL@cuenet.com
Subject: QHL: More on Reproductions
Message-ID: 3ad0c564.36d05221@aol.com
Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
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Yesterday, I had the privilege of seeing the strike offs for a new “1840’s”
line by Pat Nickols….Pat, I hope it was okay to tell, I just had to share
the news. The line is exciting….very accurate in detail and color. Of
course, there are the original colors and added color ways as well, but they
are all WONDERFUL! We were able to compare a few of the original fabrics
to the repros. Pat, like Sharon Newman has taken actual prints from quilts
and fabrics in her collection. This seems to be the way to do it – at least
for these two. The line is being produced by P&B and should be available in
late Spring, Pat will be introducing it at Quilt Market this May.
Sorry, I don’t usually do this, and I don’t mean to sound like a commercial,
but when you see them you will understand my excitement.
Deborah Roberts

Costa Mesa, CA

Date: Sun, 21 Feb 99 16:22:48 EST
From: “Bob Mills” decision@tigger.jvnc.net
To: “Quilter’s Heritage List” QHL@cuenet.com
Subject: QHL: Orvus
Message-ID: decision.1270019808E@tigger.jvnc.net
To Jennifer and others:
In the East, Agway which is a retail store and nursery catering to area
farmers and yuppies, sells Orvus and it is not special order.
I just bought a container of 7 1/2 pounds for $19.95 and my quilt store
orvis is 8 oz. for $4.99. You need to find something like a feedstore or
farmers co-op. I live in a very suburban area of NJ but am lucky we still
have these stores. And my quilts are getting very clean.
About a year or so ago I went into Agway and was told they were sold out.
Mrs. G. is washing all her sheep this week!
Jan Drechsler (not Bob)

http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/bobmills/jan.html

Date: Sun, 21 Feb 99 16:22:47 EST
From: “Bob Mills” decision@tigger.jvnc.net
To: “Quilter’s Heritage List” QHL@cuenet.com
Subject: QHL: Repro fabrics
Message-ID: decision.1270019807D@tigger.jvnc.net
Just a word of thanks on the repro fabric information. Already I have
learned a lot!
Jan Drechsler (not Bob)

http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/bobmills/jan.html

Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 16:34:18 EST
From: Kathi2174@aol.com
To: quiltfix@mail.jax.bellsouth.net
Cc: qhl@cuenet.com
Subject: Re: QHL: humility
Message-ID: 5aef56f6.36d07bda@aol.com
Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
Alan,
I did get to see wool yarn being dyed in the bazaar in Herat, Afghanistan in

  1. I’m sure the methods had not changed in centuries. The term for the
    streakiness in the color is “abrash.” It is a word of Turkish origin, that
    originally meant the dappled or speckled colors on horses. It has long been
    used to refer to the variation in saturation/hue in yarns used to weave rugs.
    It’s caused in two ways: 1. By crude (not bad, just primitive) technology
    used by dyers doing up a single batch. The second is by reusing the dye-bath.
    The second and third uses have less pigment, therefore give varying shades.
    Not much to do with quilts, is it? Unless we relate the “use what you have “
    concept to explain variations in techniques in stead of the romantic lack of
    perfection notion.
    Off the soap box!
    Kathi in Calif.

Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 15:21:09 -0800
From: “Christine Thresh” christine@winnowing.com
To: QHL@cuenet.com
Subject: QHL: I read Hidden in Plain View
Message-Id: 199902212322.PAA00834@server.cctrap.com
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Tilde’s post asked for input from those who read the book, Hidden in Plain
View.

I read the book and was disappointed. The story told by the old African
American woman was interesting, but the book did nothing to really back it
up. There were lots of references to African textiles and Masonic symbols,
but they did not seem to tie in with the story told by the quilter. The
books I own about quilting patterns led me to believe many of the patterns
she said were in the quilt “map” were not in usage at the time of the
Underground Railroad. The author of Hidden stated that she obtained the
information
from the quilter in one three hour session.
Christine Thresh
http://www.winnowing.com

Christine Thresh

Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 20:00:30 -0500 (EST)
From: JOCELYNM@delphi.com
To: QHL@cuenet.com, QHL-Digest@cuenet.com
Subject: QHL-Digest Digest V99 #50
Message-id: 01J80NAUQJ3C9C87GT@delphi.com
Content-type: TEXT/PLAIN; CHARSET=US-ASCII
On 20-FEB-1999 21:53:29.5 QHL said to JOCELYNM

Well, for my two cents, I supported the decision of the (A)IQA to
have only quilts that had not been exhibited elsewhere. There are so
many wonderful quilts out there that it is good to see different
quilts at the different shows instead of quilts “making the rounds”.
Jean Ann,
It was my understanding, however, that this rule applied to things like
entering our quilts in our local quilt shows, the county fair, etc. The talk
here was how it was going to ‘dumb down’ local shows, if the very best
quilters held out their work for the big shows…plus, if a quilt could only
be shown once, that seems like a shame!
OTOH, I really hate to go to a show and see things I’ve seen before. So
I don’t know what the happy balance is…
seen on samplers where the maker cross-stitches the letter Z backwards
so as not to offend God by making a perfect piece and have thought the
practice might carry over to quilting.
Jill,
I once spoke with a ‘plain’ quilter who said that it would be an
affront to God to deliberately put in a mistake, because that would mean you
thought you HAD achieved perfection up to that point! I don’t know if
that were the teachings of her sect, or her personal opinion, though.
Anyway, the quilt has what I would call a humility block in the lower
right hand side of the quilt. The “mistake on purpose” is that the
flowers are a totally different color than the rest of the quilt. It
This may be that the quilter ran out of fabric, and used a scrap of
another fabric that, at the time, matched, but over the years the dyes have
aged differently. I have a turn of the century Carolina Lily where the
majority of the red flowers are now brown (fading of turkey red dyes,
presumably). Among the blocks that are still red, are several different
shades of red, leading me to believe the quilter was making do with whatever
red scraps she could find.

Jocelyn

Hello,
I am Sharon Newman, and all of the fabrics I have reproduced for Moda
have been taken from real fabrics. Some are in Eileen’s book. My Vintage
Garden swag is shown there. The whole line of Vintage Garden was taken
from one quilt that had multiple color ways of the prints and two prints
not in the quilt. My Cherished Pieces fabrics were done with fabrics in
my dating fabrics box. My Twenties Treasures were taken from a 1923 Iowa
Irish Chain and a hexagon oddfellow top. My Turn of the Century fabrics
are from some of my grandmothers quilts. I have seen my fabrics in Nancy
Martin’s Two Color Quilts book. Eleanor Burns used my fabrics in her
Stockings book. You will see my fabrics used in several books.
Sharon Newman

Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 19:23:08 -0800

From: Marilyn Maddalena marilyn@crl.com

Eileen, thank you so much for your thoughtful and intelligent insights into

the UGRR book, and for taking the time to set them out so clearly so those

of us who are still novices can learn from you. You put in words just what

I had been thinking, but hadn’t taken the time to completely analyze yet. I

do think it’s an interesting book, I’m glad I bought it and read it, and it

has added to my knowledge — (as does everything I read in one way or

another) but I sure don’t want to take it as the gospel truth. Last night

on the History Channel was a very lengthy program on the UGRR — unless I

fell asleep in the middle, or was distracted by chocolate(!), there was not

one mention of quilts in the entire program. I kept waiting for it — and

thought it quite odd that such a lengthy program, obviously thoroughly

researched by experts — would not even mention signals by use of quilts,

or maps, or anything else about quilts. The only mention was of a lantern

in the window of safe houses. Wonder if the authors of the Hidden in

Plain View book knew of this program — and which one is accurate? Anyone

else see it and wonder, too? Marilyn in Sacramento


Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 21:05:55 -0800

From: Audrey Waite awquiltr@sedona.net

To: QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: Dating Fabrics

Message-ID: 36D0E5B3.7D26@sedona.net

Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

For those interested in learning more about dating antique quilts

through patterns and fabric, our own Eileen Trestain will be teaching a

class called “Dating and Heavy Petting” at Quilt Camp in the Pines,

Saturday, July 24, 1999. Send a SASE for the complete schedule to:

Quilt Camp in the Pines, 160 Sugar Loaf Drive, Sedona, AZ 86336.

Eventually we will have the class schedule on-line at:

http://www.quiltcamp.com

If you’ve never been to a quilter’s retreat or similar outing, you’re

really missing a treat!

Audrey Waite



Date: Mon, 22 Feb 1999 01:27:53 EST From: WileneSmth@aol.com

! ——————————

Date: Mon, 22 Feb 1999 07:59:37 -0500 From: Barb Garrett<BGARRETT@FAST.NET

To Judy and others – Marilyn Kowaleski owns a very high scale antique co-op on

route 272 in Adamstown, PA, named South Pointe Antiques, just south of the

Turnpike entrance. The shop has absolutely beautiful things, not just

textiles,

and there are always wonderful quilts displayed on the walls above the

showcases. It is a showcase co-op, and they are very friendly. I go and

look as

often as possible — it’s like visiting a wonderful museum. Marilyn has been a

fabric and textile collector for many years — back when things were cheap —

and she just accumulated them. I don’t know that she actively collects now.

Each March she holds a vintage fabrics and textiles show and sale at the co-op

— which includes things from her collection and things from the other dealers

in the co-op. This year’s begins March 4.

I went last year and the things were truly beautiful to look at. I asked last

year and they said they continually replace things that are sold, and suggest

coming several times during March as new things come out. I know this is at

least the 3rd year she has had the show, but it could be longer. As to whether

it is worth coming — that’s a personal thing. I live 30 minutes from

there, so

enjoy looking and hope to go this year. The quality of the items is very, very

good, the prices what one would expect for top quality from a dealer who knows

what she has. She also has unusual, one of a kind things — pot holders, pin

cushions, all kinds of smalls. The shop is closed on Tuesdays If anyone has

more questions, please ask and I can look for my literature with hours, etc.

Barb in southeastern PA<BGARRETT@FAST.NET


Date: Mon, 22 Feb 1999 08:17:28 -0500 From:

“jawhite@courant.infi.net”<JAWHITE@COURANT.INFI.NET To: Quilt History

list<QHL@CUENET.COM Subject: QHL: Hidden in Plain View Message-ID:

36D158C5.34F9@courant.infi.net

Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

I wasn’t going to say anything, but since the subject has been opened, I agree

100% about this book. My main question about this book is: why did Ozella

Williams feel the need to tell a perfect stranger, someone she had never laid

eyes on before, about this quilt code after all these years? If this is

something that has been handed down orally in families, you’d think we would

have heard about by now. The authors didn’t back up the book with enough

research. While there is an extensive bibliography listed in the back of the

book, there were statements made (supposedly statements of fact) within the

book itself that were never attributed to anyone or any research. If you are

going to state something as true fact, it must be backed up with research. The

bibliography is quite extensive (and very interesting) for such a small

book. I

also think that there were no directions obtained from the suggested quilt

patterns/quilts that couldn’t have been obtained from observing the night sky

at the time. Dr. Gladys Marie Fry wrote an excellent monograph on Harriet

Powers; yet this was never mentioned. I was left with the feeling that the

authors were trying really hard to force a point and just didn’t quite make

it.

I’m not saying the premise isn’t true – I am saying that much more good

research needs to be done. Judy White – Ct


More and more we have come to realize how much of “History” is biased

opinion…very little or none was ever written about the African American

roles

in American history…in the military, in the world of inventions and

education….but to overcompensate by printing more fictionalized history..is

not the answer… The freeing and rescuing of slaves came about because of

Abolitionist activists….not by quilts hanging on fences…and to tell the

descendents of slaves that it was anything else..does not do anything to help

them understand the underground RR movement… when I first heard about the

review of “Hidden in Plain Sight”, in USA Today… stating that an old African

American women chose a quilt customer to tell all of this “valuable”

information…I wrote to QHL saying it had the taint of hoax about it… I

know

that racism runs rampant in this country and History has always short changed

the minorities living in this country…. But “pretend” history is not the

answer… jean jquilt@aol.com

—————————— —————————— Date: Mon, 22

Feb

1999 10:37:35 -0600 From: Laura Hobby Syler<TEXAS_QUILT.CO@MAIL.AIRMAIL.NET

To:

JQuilt@aol.com, qhl@cuenet.com Subject: Re: QHL: “history” Message-Id:

3.0.3.32.19990222103735.006dd00c@mail.airmail.net Content-Type: text/plain;

charset=”us-ascii” Jean, and all, You know, I’ve been suspicious of this since

I first saw “The Good Dr.” on Oprah….and expressed those views. But what is

truely sad, and makes me a little mad, is that we all have bought the book

hoping to get more information and at least I for one feel like I was taken to

the cleaners!! Almost like that “Instant Expert” book on antique quilts that

came out last year……… Laura In chilly N. Texas At 10:10 AM 2/22/99 EST,

JQuilt@aol.com wrote: >More and more we have come to realize how much of

“History” is biased >opinion…very little or none was ever written about the

African American >roles in American history…in the military, in the world of

inventions and >education….but to overcompensate by printing more

fictionalized history..is >not the answer… > >The freeing and rescuing of

slaves came about because of Abolitionist >activists….not by quilts hanging

on fences…and to tell the descendents of >slaves that it was anything

else..does not do anything to help them understand >the underground RR

movement… >when I first heard about the review of “Hidden in Plain

Sight”, in

USA >Today… stating that an old African American women chose a quilt

customer

to >tell all of this “valuable” information…I wrote to QHL saying it had the

taint of hoax about it… >I know that racism runs rampant in this country

and

History has always short >changed the minorities living in this country….

But “pretend” history is not the answer… >jean >jquilt@aol.com > > >


Date: Mon, 22 Feb 1999 11:44:29 EST From: WileneSmth@aol.com To:

QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: 1830s LC quilt in Tobin & Dobard

Message-ID:<AE922D6F.36D1896D@AOL.COM Content-type: text/plain;

charset=US-ASCII Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit <<

However, it is the quilts which are supposedly slave quilts, one which was “a

exceptional example of an early log cabin quilt that was made by a fugitive

slave in the 1840’s….” Though a terrible photo supplied by the museum, it

appears to be a classic C.1880 black silk quilt with considerable damage. On

the next page is another log cabin quilt which “is said to be slave made. The

date is given as 1830’s by it’s owner.” Here we have a c.1830 quilt, complete

with a nice strip of mourning print right up the middle, at the front of the

picture? It looks to me like a classic c.1900 log cabin utility quilt, with a

baptist fan quilt pattern overall, and possibly a moderately thick to very

thick batting, common at that time. Even relative novices I have asked, out of

curiosity, and without leading the witness, as it were, have responded when

asked “When was this quilt made?” have said without hesitation “Turn of the

Century.” >>

I’ve been hoping that someone else would notice (and question) the 1830s Log

Cabin quilt in Hidden in Plain View because I wanted to see if others

echoed my

dating of it. Yes, I, too, immediately dated that quilt at ca. 1900-1910. It’s

fabrics are one of the common palettes of that time — cotton calicos of

whites

(shirting prints), light indigo blues, mourning grays, and wines. While I

learned not long ago that a similar light indigo blue existed in the 1820s

(I’d

love to share my story about those if anyone is interested), but it apparently

was not widely used. The wine color did not, as far as I’ve discovered, exist

until around the last quarter of the 19th century, and I believe the grays

began around the same time, though they could date a tad earlier. And I’ve yet

to see that fan quilting pattern in a quilt that was made prior to the end of

the 19th century, and it was extremely popular for utilitarian quilts early in

the 20th century. But my critique of that particular quilt is not limited to

Jackie and Raymond’s book, as I have long criticized not one, but many of the

quilts illustrated by Gladys-Marie Fry in Stitched from the Soul: Slave Quilts

from the Ante-Bellum South (NYC: Dutton Studio Books, 1990).

Six quilts are pictured on pages 18-20 (Plates 21-26) with the caption: “These

six quilts are said to have been made by ‘sewing women’ — slaves that were

specially trained to do quilting.” #21 is a broderie perse so DOES date to

slavery days. #22 is “ify” to a date — it’s either 2nd half 19th century or

1st half 20th century. #24 is definitely 19th century (lots of well-worn brown

calicos), but a closer date is not possible from that photograph. #26 is a

whole cloth quilt which is undateable from this photograph. But #23 and #25

are

20th century and MADE from 1920s-1930s prints, so can’t possibly be “slave

made” for obvious reasons. Made by “former slaves,” yes. #23 is a

Grandmother’s

Flower Garden in the common configuration of two rows of hexagons around the

center hexagon, the pieces are typically large, and the prints used are

typical

1920s-1930s. #25 is a pattern first published May 1921 in Woman’s World

magazine (Chicago) as “Cracker,” then repeated as a Four Patch in this quilt.

(This is not to say the design did not “exist” prior to 1921, just that

1921 is

the earliest publication date presently known.)

The next quilt, a two-color Lone Star top, Plate 27, is also said to be

“slave-made,” but I question it, too. Plate 31 (p.22) is an embroidered crazy

quilt, mostly wools, said to have been started by a house slave before the

Civil War and finished by her daughter in 1895. And there are still more

obviously 20th century quilts on pp. 40-41 with the caption: “These three

quilts made by slave Nancy Vaughn Ford are important, for they are good

examples of the utilitarian quilts made by slaves for their own use in their

free time.” The first one, #56, dates ca. 1880-1910. #57 incorporates a

printed

fabric of giant pastel hearts with large words between them and likely a 1950s

fabric. #58 needs no further comment here. #61 is pieced goblet blocks and it

is unlikely that pieced picture blocks existed until after the Civil War. I

also question #110, #111, and #114, all attributed to a woman “imported from

the Congo in 1818″ when she was 12 or 13 years old. All three appear to be

early 20th century.

In discussing Jackie and Raymond’s book, we are doing exactly what Raymond

suggested in his Author’s Note on page 33: “Our interpretation of the code is

based in part upon informed conjecture. While we believe that our research and

the piecing together of our findings present a strong viable case, we do not

claim that our ‘deciphering’ of the code is infallible. Nor do we insist that

our perspective is the only one for viewing the code. We have written the book

in a way that encourages questions. We leave room for the reader to add

her/his

own ideas and thereby contribute to the growing body of knowledge. In the

spirit of quiltmaking, we invite you to join us in juxtaposing ideas so that

patterns and meanings are revealed.” And that is exactly what we are doing

here

on QHL, albeit rather harshly at times. Jackie and Raymond are to be

applauded,

in my view, for bringing this idea to us “in Plain View.” I’ll climb down off

my soap box now, and Thanks for listening. –Wilene

—————————— Date: Mon, 22 Feb 1999 10:46:20 -0600 From:

Laura Hobby Syler<TEXAS_QUILT.CO@MAIL.AIRMAIL.NET To: ZegrtQuilt@aol.com,

QHL@cuenet.com Subject: Re: QHL: Re: QHL-Digest Digest V99 #51 Message-Id:

3.0.3.32.19990222104620.006e15f0@mail.airmail.net Content-Type: text/plain;

charset=”us-ascii” Shelly, do you remember the conversations that we had last

year about the “black centered Log Cabins”? There is some documentation

back to

King Tut’s tomb with one of the golden cat idols wrapped in cloth strips that

formed a log cabin design…….I think that Karen Evans also gave us some art

history background???? But I do know that the pattern became popular during

Lincoln’s presidency and there after… Laura At 11:15 AM 2/22/99 EST,

ZegrtQuilt@aol.com wrote: >I am curious as to when you all think the log cabin

pattern developed. This >is in reference to Eileen’s discussion of the book

Hidden in Plain View. I >have always thought that the pattern was not in

existance as early as it is >referenced in the publication.Shelly Z > > >

—————————— Date: Mon, 22 Feb 1999 12:21:47 EST From:

JQuilt@aol.com To: qhl@cuenet.com Subject: QHL: (no subject) Message-ID:

762b6685.36d1922b@aol.com

Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit when I wrote my “Give me a break” message a

month or so ago…after reading the review in USA Today…someone wrote to the

list saying people(Me) shouldn’t say negative things about a book before they

read it…well the review was enough for me NOT to buy the book…that’s what

reviews are all about…. When you read that a book was written based on the

“fact” that someone who died gave all of the secret codes to a

stranger…….I

think it’s time to say Buyer Beware jean


Date: Mon, 22 Feb 1999 11:21:10 -0600 (Central Standard Time) From: Mary

Persyn<MARY.PERSYN@VALPO.EDU To: qhl@cuenet.com Subject: QHL: Imperfections

Message-ID:<SIMEON.9902221110.D@VUNEWS.VALPO.EDU.VALPO.EDU Content-Type:

TEXT/PLAIN; CHARSET=US-ASCII

Have any of you seen this year’s issue of “Vintage Quilts”, the magazine issue

from ??? (I’m at work and the mag is at home) containing pictures of old

quilts

and how to reproduce them? I remember we discussed last year’s issue on line.

Anyway, this years issue has an Amish quilt that is all churn dash blocks

except one crown of thorns? block and the article says it is a typical example

of not wanting to make a perfect quiilt. To my way of thinking the magazine is

perpetuating the myth. There are some lovely quilts pictured in the magazine,

but again they did not give any information about the provenance of the quilts

or much other information of a historical nature. I have some questions about

the information they did give also. I think that detracts from the magazine

(but didn’t stop me from buying it, of course. :+)) There are articles by Bev

Dunivant (hope I spelled the name right) on crazy quilts, Anita Schakelford

(ditto as to spelling) on collecting old quilts, and ??? (another senior

moment). Now returning to lurkdom, Mary in sunny and cold Valparaiso, IN

—————————————– Mary Persyn (219) 465-7830 Email:

Mary.Persyn@valpo.edu Law Librarian School of Law Valparaiso University

Valparaiso, IN 46383 FAX: (219) 465-7917 –


Date: Mon, 22 Feb 1999 12:27:29 EST From: WileneSmth@aol.com To:

QHL@cuenet.com

Subject: QHL: re: antique “orphan” blocks Message-ID:

6f9c79c1.36d19381@aol.com

Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit << I have been pulling out all of the antique

“orphan” blocks that I’ve inherited or found… just wondering what others of

you have done to display these. I’m going to be doing some redecorating in the

spring and want to use these in my decor. Just want to know what good ideas

are

out there to use these little treasures in new and different ways. Found one I

forgot I had… found it a few years ago at a flea market. I have no idea what

pattern it is but I bought it because it has three paper template pieces

pinned

to it. They were cut from an envelope and as fortune would have it, there is a

postmark! November 26, 1928 at 4:30 p.m.

I would like to somehow display this block along with the templates. Ideas

welcome! Lauri Klobas Pacific PaKarendes, California >> This is what I’ve

learned to do with the ones that I avidly collect. I’ve accumulated a large

collection (about 1,000 now) of these “orphan blocks” over the past 20+ years

and they have become a vital part of my quilt pattern research. I’ve learned

more about quilt making and quilt makers from them than from any other single

source. Many of these were actually “pattern blocks” never intended to be used

in a quilt, but as a pattern and how it went together, especially when one

finds the templates attached to them. I did a research paper for AQSG about

these that’s in Uncoverings 1986. My collection now fills three very large

boxes and many of them are unidentified as to name or published source. They

range in age from about the 1820s-1830s to the mid-20th century. I use my huge

collection of original vintage published sources (and database) to identify a

possible source (or sources) for each block (based on the age of its fabrics),

and print a label on 100% cotton paper, attaching it to each block with a

brass

safety pin like we used in the Kansas Quilt Project. I use Barbara Brackman’s

numbering system to keep them in a “findeable” order.

While it’s all an exercise in “educated guesswork,” it also gives me a chance

to study how each quiltmaker interpreted her design as compared to the

published illustration that might have inspired her (and some of these

comparisons can be quite humorous today). I once attempted a simple framing

project to “protect” them, but soon learned that the backs are nearly as

important as the fronts, so I have gradually “unframed” many of them. I

shudder

when I think of the many “pattern blocks” that were wasted by others in the

1970s in throw pillows and other projects, but that’s all part of the learning

process for all of us. –Wilene


Date: Mon, 22 Feb 1999 19:51:45 +0400 From: Xenia Cord<XECORD@NETUSA1.NET To:

QHL@cuenet.com Subject: QHL: Re: Log Cabin Message-ID:

36D17D09.1F4C@netusa1.net

Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit On the question raised by Shelly of the age of

Log Cabin as a quilt design: in Indiana there is a quilt made shortly after

Lincoln’s death, in the Log Cabin design. When the funeral train carrying

Lincoln’s body passed through Indianapolis, the pillars of the State House

were

wrapped in black wool bunting. The plan was that the catafalque was to be

placed in the rotunda so the citizenry could file past, but a terrible storm

necessitated a change in plans, and the casket remained on the train. After

the

train departed, an Indianapolis restaurant owner obtained some of the bunting

and gave it to his wife and daughter, who made a very somber Log Cabin quilt

from it. The quilt is rusty black and dark green, primarily, with red centers

and a pinky beige wool for the light half of the blocks. The set is Barn

Raising. It is presumed that the quilt was made at the time the bunting was

obtained, so around 1866-68. You can see the quilt on page 31 of Quilts of

Indiana (1991), and read the story. Although not pictured there, there is a

photo of the state house and the draping taken when the funeral train was in

Indianapolis. A book with this photo is with the quilt. The quilt has been

exhibited a number of times in central Indiana, as the descendant is generous

in lending it to qualified exhibitors. Xenia ——————————

–=====================6898515==.ALT

Content-Type: text/html; charset=”iso-8859-1″

Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable

Administrivia:
This is the Quilt History mailing list. For information on
members services, including subscription changes, visit our

Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 19:23:08 -0800
From: Marilyn Maddalena marilyn@crl.com
To: QHL@cuenet.com
Subject: QHL: Re: “Hidden” book review
Message-Id: 3.0.3.32.19990221192308.006ea118@mail.crl.com
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=3D”us-ascii”
Eileen, thank you so much for your thoughtful and intelligent insights into
the UGRR book, and for taking the time to set them out so clearly so those
of us who are still novices can learn from you. You put in words just what
I had been thinking, but hadn’t taken the time to completely analyze yet. I
do think it’s an interesting book, I’m glad I bought it and read it, and it
has added to my knowledge — (as does everything I read in one way or
another) but I sure don’t want to take it as the gospel truth. Last night
on the History Channel was a very lengthy program on the UGRR — unless I
fell asleep in the middle, or was distracted by chocolate(!), there was not
one mention of quilts in the entire program. I kept waiting for it — and
thought it quite odd that such a lengthy program, obviously thoroughly
researched by experts — would not even mention signals by use of quilts,
or maps, or anything else about quilts. The only mention was of a lantern
in the window of safe houses. Wonder if the authors of the Hidden in
Plain View book knew of this program — and which one is accurate? Anyone

else see it and wonder, too? Marilyn in Sacramento

Date: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 21:05:55 -0800
From: Audrey Waite awquiltr@sedona.net
To: QHL@cuenet.com
Subject: QHL: Dating Fabrics
Message-ID: 36D0E5B3.7D26@sedona.net

Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
For those interested in learning more about dating antique quilts
through patterns and fabric, our own Eileen Trestain will be teaching a
class called “Dating and Heavy Petting” at Quilt Camp in the Pines,
Saturday, July 24, 1999. Send a SASE for the complete schedule to:
Quilt Camp in the Pines, 160 Sugar Loaf Drive, Sedona, AZ 86336.


Date Wed, 24 Feb 1999 073852 -0800

From Anne Scott nzquilter@xtra.co.nz

To QHL@cuenet.com

Australian quilt historian and founder of the Australian Quilt Study

Group Margaret Rolfe is an expert on these quilts.

My information is from her excellent book Australian Quilt Heritage

Published by JB Fairfax Press, 1998.

Prison reformer Elizabeth Fry, a Quaker, organised for convict women to

receive fabric and sewing needles etc so they could both be occupied on

the long ship voyage and have something they could sell on landing in

Australia. The quilts were indeed sold, not only in Australia. It appears

that women on one ship, The Wellington, sold their quilts for a guinea

each in Rio de Janeiro, en route to Australia.

Convict women were supplied with

“a small hessian bag that contained one piece of tape; one oz of pins;

one hundred needles; four balls of white sewing cotton; one ditto black;

one ditto blue; one ditto red; two balls of black worsted, half an oz

each; twenty four hanks of coloured thread, one of cloth, with 8 darning

needles and one small bodkin fastened on it; two stay laces; one thimble;

one pair of scissors; one pair of spectacles, when required; two lbs of

patch-work pieces.”

Elizabeth Fry’s work in the prisons dates from 1816 through until her

death in 1843. Elizabeth Fry was responsible for supplying convict women

on 106 ships which made their way to Australia during this time. Over

12,000 women were among the passengers. Most of the quilts were

utilitarian and doubtless have long since disappeared.

The most famous prison quilt is the Rajah quilt, discovered in 1980 in

Scotland and subsequently purchased by the National Gallery of Australia.

It was stitched by the convict women on board the Rajah as a thank you

for Elizabeth Fry. It remains unquilted, medallion style with a broderie

perse central block. It is 325 cm x 337 cm – a very large quilt top.

I too have been watching this quilt on auction with interest and would

suspect the correct dating, if it is indeed a convict quilt would be more

likely to be between 1820-1845.

None of the convict ships came to New Zealand.

Anne Scott

Editor & Publisher

New Zealand QUILTER magazine

Wellington, New Zealand


Date Tue, 23 Feb 1999 164349 -0500

From “J. G. Row” Judygrow@blast.net

would not make their (item)

perfect, as only Mohammed was perfect. This was on Discovery/TLC, and I

meant to remember everything, but …………It was PBS, “Antiques

Roadshow”, and >whichever middle-eastern tribe had woven the rug they were

appraising (the rug >was HUGE). The man appraising stated that they

wouldn’t use matching dye

lots of yarn to create the piece, because only Mohammed was perfect and

capable of making perfection. And as the years went on, the dye lots

would fade differently, making the differences even more noticeable (the

rug in question had blue sections that were two different shades of the

same color).

Alan, I saw that show too. I don’t remember hearing the appraiser speak

about perfection, etc., but I do remember him speaking about the different

dye lots. The correct term for shades of the same color in an Oriental rug

is “abrash.” Remember that many of those rugs, especially the smaller

Caucasian rugs were woven by nomadic people. They were able to buy or dye

only small quantities of wool, and so the different dye lots would show up

immediately in the rug. It is not particularly something that would show up

with time.

The rug on PBS was a Kirman I think, woven in Northern Iran. Because of its

size I doubt if it was woven by nomadic people, and I doubt if many men

knotted many knots in it. Because of the great number of knots psi usually

women and young girls (whose fingers were smaller) knotted rugs on huge

vertical looms, three and four women to a row.

I am sure Maury will correct me if I am wrong (please).

Judy in Ringoes, NJ

judygrow@blast.net


Date Wed, 24 Feb 1999 081149 -0600

From Mark Kriss mkriss@quiltcollector.com (by way of Quilting Heritage ListServ qrs@albany.net)

Content-Type text/plain; charset=”us-ascii”

Thanks very much for all the interest in and comments about the Australian

Prison Quilt from Diana Leone’s collection.

Based on your questions and concerns, Diana has contacted several quilting

experts and historians in Australia who might assist in dating the quilt

more precisely. At this point, she’s placing it in the 1860-1880 range. If

you have any information or sources of documentation that might be

relevant, please send it to Diana directly at dianaleone@hotmail.com.

As soon as she has more information, it will be posted to the QHL list as

well as at http//www.quiltcollector.com/prisoner.htm

Best regards,

–Mark Kriss

  • – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – +

Mark Kriss mkriss@quiltcollector.com

Quiltcollector.com

Online Quilt Auctions for Discriminating Buyers

www.quiltcollector.com phone 650.857.9035

  • – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – +

Date Wed, 24 Feb 1999 081501 EST

From ZegrtQuilt@aol.com

Content-transfer-encoding 7bit

re Australian quilt

I have really appreciated everyone’s comments about the auction of the

Australian quilt. For me, the most important part is that it was quilted in

  1. It is not an 1880 quilt if it was quilted in 1996. It is an 1880 top

quilted in 1996.That alone changes the value dramatically, in my humble

opinion. Shelly Zegart


Date Wed, 24 Feb 1999 082915 +0000

From Bobbie Aug qwltpro@uswest.net

Dear Shelly,

Re log cabin quilts. The earliest documention (I mean documentation

supporting the date), according to my research, is 1850.

Bobbie A. Aug

ZegrtQuilt@aol.com wrote

re Australian quilt

>

I have really appreciated everyone’s comments about the auction of the

Australian quilt. For me, the most important part is that it was quilted in

  1. It is not an 1880 quilt if it was quilted in 1996. It is an 1880 top

quilted in 1996.That alone changes the value dramatically, in my humble

opinion. Shelly Zegart


Date Wed, 24 Feb 1999 104458 -0500

From “Peggy O’Connor” mnoc@brinet.com

To QHL@cuenet.com

Content-Transfer-Encoding 7bit

One of the things I’ve wondered is what should one expect to pay for an

antique top that has been recently quilted, versus what the piece would cost

if the top had been quilted at the time it was made. Price surely depends

on the rarity of the top itself, but does the quilting or its detail play

much of a role in this case? Any opinions?

Peggy in NC, where the forecasted snowstorm has produced not one flake


Date Wed, 24 Feb 1999 090600 -0700

From “Jeanne.Fetzer” Jeanne.Fetzer@integrityonline3.com

To “QHL” qhl@cuenet.com

Content-Transfer-Encoding quoted-printable

Dear Friends

I just turned in a reservation (my nephew is getting married in San =

Francisco the same week) at the Best Western Paducah Inn for April 18 – =

23 (check out on April 24, 1999). The phone number is 502-443-2323. If =

you call the 800 number they will tell you it is all booked. If you =

hurry and need a room, you may be able to get this reservation. The =

room is a single king bed for one person. If they tell you they are =

full, mention my name (Jeanne Fetzer) and see if you can have the room. =

I will be jealous all that week, but try to put on a smile at my =

nephew’s wedding (27 yr. old handsome boy with a killer smile). =


Date Wed, 24 Feb 1999 111208 -0600 (CST)

From Carol H Elmore celmore@ksu.edu

To QHL@cuenet.com

Subject QHL Cheryl Phillips

Message-ID Pine.SOL.3.96L.990224111055.12679A-100000@abc.ksu.ksu.edu

Content-Type TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII

Does anyone know the e-mail address for Cheryl Phillips who wrote

Wedgeworks. I need to contact her as soon as possible.

Carol Elmore


Date Wed, 24 Feb 1999 132028 +0000

From Bobbie Aug qwltpro@uswest.net

To Carol H Elmore celmore@ksu.edu

CC QHL@cuenet.com

Subject Re QHL Cheryl Phillips

Message-ID 36D3FC9B.91F80DD1@clsp.uswest.net

Content-Type text/plain; charset=us-ascii

Content-Transfer-Encoding 7bit

Carol,

Cheryl is from over on the Western Slope. Haven’t seen her in awhile

and I don’t think she is a current member of The Colorado Quilting

Council, but I will email Membership Chair and get back to you.

Bobbie

Carol H Elmore wrote

Does anyone know the e-mail address for Cheryl Phillips who wrote

Wedgeworks. I need to contact her as soon as possible.

Carol Elmore


Date Thu, 25 Feb 1999 083841 +0800

From Kath Balfour balfourk@echidna.id.au

To QHL@cuenet.com

Subject QHL Prisoner’s quilt, or criminal assault?

Message-Id

Content-Type text/plain; charset=”us-ascii”

I’ve checked out the website about the Australian “prisoners” quilt, too,

which starts with a mission statement about trust and goodwill,and ends

with a seal of authenticity.

I agree with Jean Eitel. For the casual collector like me, there are many

very obvious warning signals from the outset that something is amiss — the

terminology (“convict” was the term of the day), the dates, the story about

how the quilt was supposedly made, and, glaringly, the omission of any

description of the materials, etc.

What is heartbreaking is the suspicion that there may have been something

historically worthwhile to start with, before the “expert” hastened its

demise by assembling, repairing, and quilting out any authenticity or value

the original piece(s) may have had. (Sigh) Another real story lost to

history…now THAT’S criminal!

Taken on face value (is there any other way, on an internet auction?)

anyone should conclude that, as we say in Australia, someone is having a

lend of us. Meaning it sounds like total fabrication (pardon the pun).

Caveat emptor.

Now when I hear the name Diane Leone, of course I will associate it with

this dubious episode.

Jean also speculated the quilt may have been made later, possibly on a

bride ship.

<No doubt “brides” were sent to Australia long after prison ships stopped,

and if these women were brides for the male settlers of Australia maybe

they were not prisoners at all. There, that is my addition to the oral

history mis-information. Anyone else?>

From the late 19th century, it was well advertised in the British Isles

that there were opportunities for women in the Australian colonies. Women

came of their own free will and took their chances when they got here. The

colonies were poorly populated, and they were keen to advertise their

attractions to entice settlement.

My friend has written a biography of her grandmother, a Scottish woman

working as a domestic servant in England, who came to Perth in 1900 on a

ship mostly filled with single women. She had kept a diary aboard ship, and

such documents from working class women are very rare indeed. The diary is

wonderful, and tells of her 6 weeks adventure in her own words, and her

hopes and dreams. No quilting, but certainly there was needlework to while

away the hours at sea. She went to the goldfields to work as a hotel maid,

met an Irishman recently arrived by way of Chicago, and eventually went

farming. He died, leaving her with 6 little kids to rear and a farm to work

by herself. She kept the diary in her trunk, never writing another word

once she got here. She died in the 1950s. Now my friend is making a

pictorial quilt called Maggie’s Story, after her grandmother. 1999 is the

centenery of women’s suffrage in Western Australia, and there will be a big

exhibition of quilts depicting Western Australian women and their

accomplishments.

cheers

Kath Balfour


Date Wed, 24 Feb 1999 203445 -0500

From laurel horton kalmia@innova.net

To QHL, and beyond,

Here’s something to puzzle over

I’ve been working with a collection of 16 quilts made by three generations

within an extended family in South Carolina. In preparation for taking

down a physical description of each one, I was spending some time just

looking at each one before I wrote anything. I was examining one, called

“Sunflower” by an earlier owner, which is similar to a number of “Mariner’s

Compass” variations, having a circle in the center surrounded by four

concentric rings of points. The fabrics are, from the center out, a yellow

print, red solid, green print, and blue floral print. A very nice example

of a pieced quilt from the 3rd quarter, 19th century, I thought. Then I

counted the points, expecting 12 or maybe 16. There are 11 points. Even

though the needlework seemed very exact, I thought maybe one of the

sunflowers might have been “off,” so I checked the other blocks–each of

them has 11 points.

Now I’ve looked at a lot of quilts over the years, but I don’t remember

anything quite like this. I can’t think of any reason that someone would

have intentionally laid out a pattern with this degree of

difficulty–unless she wanted to impress others with her drafting and

piecing skills. But even then, the effect is so subtle that it would be

easy to miss the fact that this is not your typical

circle-divided-into-60-degree-segments. It’s clear that the formation of

11-point rings is quite intentional. All of the hand-pieced points are

evenly spaced.

This makes me wonder if there were earlier quilts like this which I didn’t

examine closely enough to detect similar anomalies. Has anyone else seen

quilts, blocks, photos, or descriptions of quilts with radiating pieced

designs which have an unusual number of points? Or can anyone suggest the

significance of the number 11?

Laurel Horton


Date Wed, 24 Feb 1999 211127 -0800

From Audrey Waite awquiltr@sedona.net

To kalmia@innova.net

CC QHL@cuenet.com

Laurel

Check out The Smithsonian Treasury AMERICAN QUILTS, p. 48. The Groom’s

Quilt by Benoni Pearce. This quilt was made in 1850 and look at the

stars in the bottom row. The second block from the left has 13 points!

The star in the middle has 9 points. Maybe they had better drafting

tools in the 1850’s!

I did volunteer work at the Smithsonian in 1980-81 and did some

conservation on this quilt for an exhibit at the Renwick. I noticed the

odd number of star points then, so I’m happy to hear that Benoni wasn’t

the only one making “funky” stars. By the way the Smithsonian thought

Benoni was a woman until some relatives came to see the quilt and told

them Benoni was a MAN!

Audrey Waite in sunny Sedona, AZ


Date Thu, 25 Feb 1999 043138 -0000

From “Anne Copeland” anneappraiser@mailcity.com

Hello to all. I am Anne Copeland, an AQS certified quilt appraiser, quilt historian, quilt restoration person, and co-founder of Repiecers of the Past, a quilt study/quilt restoration group in Southern California.

I am interested in all historical subjects related to quilts, and in just about every type of quilts. I have a collection of quilts myself, and have also done quilting, though I am not going to be one of the world’s great quilters.

I am so happy to be a part of this discussion group, and look forward to getting e-mail from each and every one. Oh yes, I am also an animal and plant lover, and have more than my share of each. I hope to hear from some of my old friends here too, people I haven’t heard from in ages. Cheers, Anne

Get your FREE Email at http//mailcity.lycos.com

Get your PERSONALIZED START PAGE at http//personal.lycos.com


Date Wed, 24 Feb 1999 211900 PST

From “diana leone” dianaleone@hotmail.com

Content-type text/plain

I appreciate the information Kath Balfour has contributed to the

on-going discussion about the Australian Quilt Top.

With respect to the specific issues raised, here are some replies

1) First some background about the piece. I purchased the top from a

dealer in NYC about 10 years ago. It was in fairly good condition. I had

the top restored, carefully, and had the quilt top finished. We used the

best fabrics available for the restoration. The top was assembled with

the best batting and backing I could find that I felt did not distract

from the original. The quilt was very finely hand quilted. This took

over a year to complete. I feel, as a person who cares very much about

the preservation and integrity of quilts, that what I did to this top

did not ruin it but preserved it for a longer period of time. Certainly

it is not the way it may have been finished in Australia, but it was

done with care and love and not to offend. I do feel that the best place

for this piece is back to Australia to some Museum or the like.

2) My words, prisoner instead of convict, while being wrong from the

Australian end, were entirely my error. I was told a brief story about

the quilt when I was in Melbourne. I now realize that the information

was sketchy at best. So, most of all, I appreciate all your help and

diligence in finding out more about this work. Any further documentation

is appreciated. It is spectacular and a treasure.

Meanwhile, again my thanks for correcting me so willingly. The web site

quiltcollector.com is going to be a great vehicle for us all, to learn,

to share and to hopefully bridge some gaps.

My best to you, Diana Leone


Date Thu, 25 Feb 1999 084836 +0000

From Bobbie Aug qwltpro@uswest.net

Laurel,

Give us a few more clues such as the overall size of the piece. Were the

colors representative of Pennsylvania Dutch quilts? Were their borders? Did

the red print have black stems and leaves and yellow flowers? What color

green? I’m looking at the quilt from an age point of view and not from the

significance of the number 11. For all we know, perhaps there were 11

children.

Bobbie A. Aug

laurel horton wrote

To QHL, and beyond,

>

Here’s something to puzzle over

>

I’ve been working with a collection of 16 quilts made by three generations

within an extended family in South Carolina. In preparation for taking

down a physical description of each one, I was spending some time just

looking at each one before I wrote anything. I was examining one, called

“Sunflower” by an earlier owner, which is similar to a number of “Mariner’s

Compass” variations, having a circle in the center surrounded by four

concentric rings of points. The fabrics are, from the center out, a yellow

print, red solid, green print, and blue floral print. A very nice example

of a pieced quilt from the 3rd quarter, 19th century, I thought. Then I

counted the points, expecting 12 or maybe 16. There are 11 points. Even

though the needlework seemed very exact, I thought maybe one of the

sunflowers might have been “off,” so I checked the other blocks–each of

them has 11 points.

>

Now I’ve looked at a lot of quilts over the years, but I don’t remember

anything quite like this. I can’t think of any reason that someone would

have intentionally laid out a pattern with this degree of

difficulty–unless she wanted to impress others with her drafting and

piecing skills. But even then, the effect is so subtle that it would be

easy to miss the fact that this is not your typical

circle-divided-into-60-degree-segments. It’s clear that the formation of

11-point rings is quite intentional. All of the hand-pieced points are

evenly spaced.

>

This makes me wonder if there were earlier quilts like this which I didn’t

examine closely enough to detect similar anomalies. Has anyone else seen

quilts, blocks, photos, or descriptions of quilts with radiating pieced

designs which have an unusual number of points? Or can anyone suggest the

significance of the number 11?

>

Laurel Horton


Date Thu, 25 Feb 1999 082724 -0600

From DSefton@kcstar.com

To QHL@cuenet.com

Subject QHL Kansas City Star quilt patterns book

Message-ID 41E1182C943BD211B0B000805F6595480479EC@kcsxch01.kcstar.com

Content-Type text/plain

Hello. My name is Dru Sefton and I’m a reporter with The Kansas City Star

newspaper in Kansas City, Mo., home of the famous quilt patterns. Right now

I’m at work on a book about the patterns, the first that will be published

by The Star. I’m on the lookout for quilters around the country who take a

special interest in the Star patterns (perhaps they’ve quilted dozens of

them, or have collected all the patterns) as well as photographs of quilters

and quilting bees from the 1930s through the late 1950s. I’ve been in

contact with the (very helpful!) Central Oklahoma Quilters Guild, as well as

Dorothymae Groves in Kansas City and Wilene Smith in Wichita, Kan., all of

whom compiled the patterns into books. If anyone out there has any

suggestions on my project – especially photograph sources – I’d be very

grateful to hear from you. You may post back to the list or e-mail me

directly at dsefton@kcstar.com. Thanks in advance! Regards, Dru


Date: Thu, 25 Feb 1999 21:32:55 EST

From: ZegrtQuilt@aol.com

A friend of mine is looking for around 4 yards of 1840 red print

fabric..preferably a ribbon fabric, a paisley or a small red print–American –

and it can have other colors in it if it reads red predominently in excellent

condition. If any of you have any leads please e mail me. Thanks Shelly Zegart


Date: Thu, 25 Feb 1999 23:02:10 -0600

I’m not a member of this list but have been passed a little correspondence

about an alleged ‘prisoners quilt’ dating from the 1880s. Transportation

of British convicts to Western Australia ceased in 1868, but in any case,

no women were sent to Western Australia. Transportation to Van Diemen;’s

Land (Tasmania) which included women, ceased in the early 1850s, and to New

South Wales (again including women) in the late 1830s. So, as one of your

correspondents said, it’s not a prisoners quilt.

All Australian colonial governments had schemes to assist single women to

emigrate in the second part of the nineteenth century. These women came

out not specifically as ‘brides’ (so it’s not correct to refer to ‘bride

ships’, although indeed many did ultimately marry) but to enter domestic

sercice, which was often a government requirement as a pay back for the

assisted passage. On board emigrant ships, these women were in government

patrties under the care and control of a shipboard matron. They were often

encouraged to undertake needlework and materials were provided for the

purpose, It’s not impossible that some women from one of these ships could

have made a quilt.

I’d love to her more !

Dr Jan Gothard, History Programme, Murdoch University, Perth, Western

Australia

Dr Jan Gothard

History Programme

Murdoch University

Murdoch

Western Australia 6150


Date: Thu, 25 Feb 1999 23:18:53 -0600

From: Russell-Hill russhill@ctesc.net

Folks,

I have a question I hope you can answer. A fellow bee member bought

some embroidered squares recently while in Houston TX. These squares

are of the state flowers. She has only 17 of them. we are looking for

age and something about theses patterns. So here is some info to help.

They are on point the states name is abbreviated ie Mass. or Miss. This

was before the change to 2 letters. there is a shield with the states

name in it and it is at the bottom of the point holding the stems of the

flowers. Alaska is part of this group and it is all spelled out where

the others are not. The shield is like three points at the top curving

down to a point at the bottom. They are in pretty good shape one or two

may have some discoloring in a few places but I don’t think it saw much

light because the colors of the floss are not fadded. Also the floss

has some shine makes me think of silk.

I can’t think of any thing else to tell you but I will answer any

question that i can. Your help would be greatly appreciated. thanks

I also want to say thanks on the reviews of “Hidden…….” I have

changed my mind in wanting to read it. Sounds to good to be true.

Debbie


Date: Fri, 26 Feb 1999 10:48:39 -0500

From: laurel horton <kalmia@innova.net

Dear QHL:

Thanks for the responses to my query about stars with an odd number of

points.

Audrey suggested:

Check out The Smithsonian Treasury AMERICAN QUILTS, p. 48. The Groom’s

Quilt by Benoni Pearce. This quilt was made in 1850 and look at the

stars in the bottom row. The second block from the left has 13 points!

The star in the middle has 9 points. Maybe they had better drafting

tools in the 1850’s!

And I’ll do it as soon as I unpack my books–we’ve been renovating.

However, sounds like the stars vary in this one, while the “Sunflower” is

very carefully drafted and all the stars are identical.

Bobbie requested:

Give us a few more clues such as the overall size of the piece. Were the

colors representative of Pennsylvania Dutch quilts? Were their borders? Did

the red print have black stems and leaves and yellow flowers? What color

green? I’m looking at the quilt from an age point of view and not from the

significance of the number 11. For all we know, perhaps there were 11

children.

The quilt is most likely 1850-1860. I haven’t measured it, but it is

square and larger than the later quilts in the collection. I can’t speak

to PA German quilts since my expertise is in the southeastern states. The

quilt has sashing typical of the immediate local area: two solid red strips

sandwiching a single white strip. The single border is narrow for this

area and time, made from a red print with a small black figure–sorry, my

snapshots don’t show the nature of the figure. Hmm. The maker had only

three children, but she herself was the oldest of eleven. That’s the

closest thing to a theory I’ve got at the moment. Thanks! (Maybe I’ll

write a book about family size reflected in the number of star points. I

could make the talk show circuit!)

Laurel Horton


Date: Fri, 26 Feb 1999 12:17:57 -0500

From: Nancy Roberts <robertsn@norwich.net

I’m gathering input for a potential magazine feature on how things have

changed in the textile field over the years (and why, if that

info is available and applicable). I had two thoughts which I’ll share below.

If you have any you’re willing to add, together we might come up with an

interesting piece. Please post them if you have some and I’ll get back to

you. Many thanks! Nancy

1) When learning to sew in home ec. class (in the late ’50s & early ’60s), we

were taught to straighten fabric by pulling the daylights out of it. That was

because fabrics were often printed off grain and would not hang properly in a

garment unless we maltreated them in this way. When did that idea get phased

out and why?

2) Terminology has changed. Fabric used to be more commonly referred to as

“material”. Today, that term seems dated when used, though I do hear it used

some.

3) Many quilters today prefer 100% cotton fabrics for quilting. There was a

time several decades ago when 100% cotton was not the popular choice. Blends,

stain-release finishes and wrinkle resistance were the by-words in fabric

shops.

What would you add?


Date: Fri, 26 Feb 1999 11:22:15 EST

From: Bethquilt5@aol.com

At the Michigan State University Museum we have a ca. 1890’s silk diamonds

quilt tied with clear beads. At first glance it appears to be an eight pointed

layout like a lone star. Upon closer inspection the layout is seven pointed.

The diamonds are pieced concentrically and there are no corners. It is too

well executed to be one where the maker opted to leave off one unit of

diamonds because things didn’t fit. It lays beautifully flat and is an

intriguing piece.

Beth Donaldson

Quilt Collections Assistant

MSU Museum

quilts@musuem.msu.edu or

Bethquilt5@aol.com


Date: Fri, 26 Feb 1999 12:00:56 -0800

From: ptwkwhs@prcn.org (N Mussellam)

Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit


From: Nancy Roberts robertsn@norwich.net

>

2) Terminology has changed. Fabric used to be more commonly referred to

as

“material”. Today, that term seems dated when used, though I do hear it

used

some.

>

Dear Nancy,

My grandmother sewed every stitch that I wore until the age of 18- and then

I still got many special outfits over the years that my GM and Mom tailored

for me. My Grandmom is now 95 and fabric was always referred to as “goods”

, and I always supposed that was shortened from Yard Goods. As we strolled

through a yard goods dept of a department store ( yeah- remember when the

best place to purchase fabric was in your multi storied department store )

she would stroke a bolt of camel and wool suiting and comment,” This is a

nice piece of “goods”.

Anyone else know of this term used?? I always will think of this term

fondly and remember her.

Nina in BC


Date: Fri, 26 Feb 1999 15:48:28 EST

From: JQuilt@aol.com

To: robertsn@norwich.net

Cc: qhl@cuenet.com

Subject: Re: QHL: how things change

Message-ID: fcc17d3c.36d7089c@aol.com

Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII

Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit

Small prints were called calico……Peter Pan and Concord were the most well

known print fabrics…Calico came in 36 in. width..summer fabrics were

linen,seersucker, pique, waffle pique and voile/lawn…toddlers/ young girls

summer dresses were made out of gingham,dimity,dotted swiss and

organdy….toddlers/young boys summer suits were linen and seersucker…

jean

jquilt@aol.com


Date: Fri, 26 Feb 1999 21:19:50 EST

From: JBQUILTOK@aol.com

To: QHL@cuenet.com

In a message dated 2/26/99 11:14:28 AM Central Standard Time,

robertsn@norwich.net writes:

<< 3) Many quilters today prefer 100% cotton fabrics for quilting. There was a

time several decades ago when 100% cotton was not the popular choice. Blends,

stain-release finishes and wrinkle resistance were the by-words in fabric

shops.

>

I read in an old quilt magazine that an older quilter recommended the

poly/cotton blends over 100% cotton because it lasted so much longer. (Sorry,

I don’t remember the exact year or the name of the magazine – probably early

80’s). I used my blend scraps from clothing in some of my early quilts until

I realized they melted down some when hit with a hot iron. Then I switched to

pretty much 100% for better piecing accuracy. Double knits were popular for a

while also – they never wore out.

Janet


Date: Sat, 27 Feb 1999 05:19:54 EST

From: JBQUILTOK@aol.com

To: russhill@ctesc.net, QHL@cuenet.com

In a message dated 2/26/99 9:39:15 AM Central Standard Time,

russhill@ctesc.net writes:

<< A fellow bee member bought

some embroidered squares recently while in Houston TX. These squares

are of the state flowers. She has only 17 of them. we are looking for

age and something about theses patterns. So here is some info to help.

They are on point the states name is abbreviated ie Mass. or Miss. This

was before the change to 2 letters. there is a shield with the states

name in it and it is at the bottom of the point holding the stems of the

flowers. Alaska is part of this group and it is all spelled out where

the others are not. >>

If Alaska is in the group it had to be after Jan 3, 1959 – the date Alaska

joined the Union. I have a reprint of the 48 States Flower quilt designed by

McKim Studios & published in the Daily Oklahoman in the 1920’s or 1930’s. The

state names in it were in a roughly circular design & vary from 2 letter

abbreviations to spelled out names. There were 48 states at the time this was

designed.

Janet


I’m not a member of this list but have been passed a little correspondence

about an alleged ‘prisoners quilt’ dating from the 1880s. Transportation

of British convicts to Western Australia ceased in 1868, but in any case,

no women were sent to Western Australia. Transportation to Van Diemen’s

Land (Tasmania) which included women, ceased in the early 1850s, and to New

South Wales (again including women) in the late 1830s. So, as one of your

correspondents said, it’s not a prisoners quilt.

All Australian colonial governments had schemes to assist single women to

emigrate in the second part of the nineteenth century. These women came

out not specifically as ‘brides’ (so it’s not correct to refer to ‘bride

ships’, although indeed many did ultimately marry) but to enter domestic

service, which was often a government requirement as a pay back for the

assisted passage. On board emigrant ships, these women were in government

parties under the care and control of a shipboard matron. They were often

encouraged to undertake needlework and materials were provided for the

purpose, It’s not impossible that some women from one of these ships could

have made a quilt.

I’d love to hear more !

Dr Jan Gothard, History Programme, Murdoch University, Perth, Western

Australia

email: gothard@socs.murdoch.edu.au


Date: Sat, 27 Feb 1999 09:12:03 -0800

From: Julie Silber quiltcomplex@earthlink.net

Hi All,

Julie Silber and My 2 cents worth: I have known Marilyn Kowaleski for almost 30 years — she has a fabulous “eye” and a great deal of knowledge.

Living here in California, I have not been to one of those show/sales, but I have visited the shop on other occasions. Highest quality “stuff”

from an honest and reputable dealer. This decades long quilt junkie HIGHLY RECOMMENDS Marilyn K and her shop. Julie Silber


Date: Sat, 27 Feb 1999 15:44:10 +0400

From: Xenia Cord xecord@netusa1.net

IMHO, maybe quilting an old top is OK if it is for your personal

pleasure, and IF you also clearly label the top as a multi-year project

(for instance, you finished a quilt begun by your grandmother). The

problem comes when old tops, recently quilted, are offered to the public

without explanation, and with a price equivalent to similar quilts made

complete at one time. Many who admire old quilts are not quilt-literate

enough to recognize the recent activity, and I think most purists agree

that the most recent (major) activity dates the quilt.

We are conditioned – have been throughout this century – to look at

quilts as PRODUCTS of some activity, and not to consider as fully the

PROCESS of creation. But the process – and when it takes place – has a

lot to do with how we should assess the product. Those who are more

sophisticated in their understand ing often feel that there is more to a

quilt than how it looks to the eye. Back, thread, batting, quilting

design, intensity of quilting should all reflect the same period as the

quilt top. Today’s 100% cottons often have a chemical “memory” that

makes them behave, and behave differently from cottons of earlier

decades. Processed cotton batts do not give the same appearance as

hand-spread cotton wadding. Threads are manufactured somewhat

differently, I think. We don’t quilt as closely or as intensely over

the surface as quilters used to do (the batting, and also a difference

in standards).

Finally, a rare top shouldn’t be quilted anyway; and quilting an old top

should lessen, not increase, its value as an historical object. So,

IMHO – this is like new wine in old bottles.

Xenia


Date: Sat, 27 Feb 1999 19:54:36 +0000

From: “Debora C. Wykes” <wykesfcn@tdi.net

< I have been pulling out all of the antique

“orphan” blocks that I’ve inherited or found… just wondering what

others of

you have done to display these. I’m going to be doing some redecorating

in the

spring and want to use these in my decor. Just want to know what good ideas

are

Go to QNM magazine, January/February 1998 and there is a beatiful article

“New Life for Old Blocks” bu Vivian Ritter with wonderful ideas for you.

The mag. is carried in my small city library so it should be available for

you. email me if you can’t find it.

Debbie in Monroe, MI


Date: Sat, 27 Feb 1999 20:55:12 -0500

From: The Lesters jeanntom@utkux.utcc.utk.edu


Date: Sat, 27 Feb 1999 18:03:33 -0800

From: “R & L Carroll” Robert.J.Carroll@GTE.net

Hello!

Peggy asks the difficult question of how much should one pay for a quilt

that has recently been quilted.

As a quilt collector who is constantly looking for quilts at flea markets,

antique shops, quilt shows, antique shows, and quilt dealer booths, I have

seen my fair share of quilts that have been newly quilted. I have purchased

a few of these quilts. If the quilting is excellent, there is plenty of it,

batting is cotton, back is right, and quilting is done in a style or pattern

consistent with the age, I would be willing to pay about 50%-60% of the

price of the quilt , if, it had been quilted when the top was made. For

example, if a quilt would sell for $600, I might pay $300.

If quilting is sparse, batting wrong, or something else looks wrong to me

then I probably would not want to spend 50%. And if there are too many

things that bother me I won’t buy it.

Usually the prices on these quilts are very reasonable, the seller probably

knows they can not get full price. I have purchased a couple of these

quilts for an amount equivalent to what I would have paid for the top alone.

So the way I look at it is, I have the quilting for free.

I teach in a quilt shop that has an 80 year old lady who does quilting for

customers and I have seen dozens of plain looking old tops transformed into

beautiful quilts with the proper quilting.

Is this the right thing to do to old tops? I think it’s up to the owner to

make that decision. It is really no one else’s business. I don’t believe it

lowers the value of the top, unless it’s a Baltimore Album or some other

rare beauty or historically important top. The exception is machine

quilting. I would not be interested in a quilt with machine quilting. The

only antique quilts that I have ever seen with original machine quilting

were plain utility quilts.

This is the opinion of one quilt collector.

Laurette in So. California


Date: Sun, 28 Feb 1999 04:01:41 -0000

From: “Anne Copeland” anneappraiser@mailcity.com

–I agree with you totally, Laurette. It is up to the owner to determine what to do with the top, and it is, in fact, no one else’s business. Years ago, when we were all just getting into this, there was a lot of controversy about doing new work on an old top, or repairing quilts in bad shape. Knowledge and situations have changed, however, and we know better how to do a good job now, for the most part. I also have seen newly quilted antique tops that, as you said, sell for as much as a quilt of similar quality. There are certain quilt tops that cannot be quilted by hand because they would fall apart during quilting. Even machine quilting would be a strain, so those are sometimes simply backed and either tied, or have no batting, just a backing and binding. Again, it depends on the owners ultimate intent for the quilt.


Date: Sun, 28 Feb 1999 10:39:27 -0600

From: Laura Hobby Syler texas_quilt.co@mail.airmail.net

Debbie, as to the state blocks, check out the Aunt Martha’s transfer

patterns. I sold them in my shop years ago and believe that they are still

available. They may be the set that your friend is looking for.

Laura

Is wonderfully springlike N. Texas

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